I read a lot and stumbled across a couple of passages the other day that reminded me of a discussion we were having here at one time regarding America "sticking their nose in other people's business."
The first was in the dairy of Anne Frank...
Monday, May 22nd 1944
The English, despite their bluff, are certainly no more to blame for the war than all the other countries, large and small, that are now occupied by the Germans. The British are not about to offer their excuses; true, they were sleeping during the years Germany was rearming itself, but all the other countries, especially those bordering Germany, were asleep too. England and the rest of the world have discovered that burying your head in the sand doesn't work, and now each of them, especially England, is having to pay a heavy price for its ostrich policy.
http://www.amazon.com/Anne-Frank-Diary- ... 0553296981
The second was in Witness to Nuremberg by Richard Sonnenfeldt....
page 47 about 1/3 of the way down, "Opponents at home and abroad should have realized who the man was (regarding Hitler) and rejected him and squashed him when it would have still been easy to do so, before 1936. Hitler's example convinced me it is advisable to fight tyrants before they become monsters."
http://www.amazon.com/books/dp/1559708166
This is the link on our forum that really stuck out to me. viewtopic.php?f=20&t=5097&start=10 I linked it to page two, because that seemed most relevant.
So do these words written by those who experienced tyrants abroad change anyone's minds regarding American intervention?