This song feels so ahead of it’s time when we think of the attitude towards intervening in the war, that everyone was for it and there was little or no refuting it. Interestingly, this song encouraged not only their freedom to disagree, but that generally everyone could agree that US intervention in the war at that point was vital to ending it. The song is obviously pro war, but the way they present it seems so strangely neutral, and asks “Where will your place in history be?”
This song feels so ahead of it’s time when we think of the attitude towards intervening in the war, that everyone was for it and there was little or no refuting it.
Interestingly, this song encouraged not only their freedom to disagree, but that generally everyone could agree that US intervention in the war at that point was vital to ending it. The song is obviously pro war, but the way they present it seems so strangely neutral, and asks “Where will your place in history be?”
Pure propaganda
This song even resembles Lee, McArthur, Eisenhower, Hemingway, Gable, Wayde Preston, etc who fought in wars back then during their histories!
ur gay man
@@lumunite6049 shut up
Originally premiered in Berlin's musical 'Dance and Grow Thin.' Seems to be rather obscure nowadays.