Here are two truths about the Kellogg-Briand Pact.
1. It wanted to outlaw war, so that nothing like The Great War would ever happen again.
2. It failed to have any real impact in keeping nations from pursuing war, and we now call "The Great War" World War I, because it was followed by World War II.
French Minister of Foreign Affairs Aristide Briand and US Secretary of State Frank B. Kellogg were key proponents of the plan, which was signed by various dignitaries at the White House in 1928. The pact stated that the signing nations were "persuaded that the time has come when a frank renunciation of war as an instrument of national policy should be made," and so the signers of the treaty declared their opposition to war. By their example they hoped to encourage other nations of the world to join them in the same commitment.
The pact had little effect.
First the person will be located in the smokey corners of the building.
He smells fire as he starts walking out a bit farther from the building.
The person sees dead bodies but chooses to ignore it.
He hears the battle cries of the soldiers who are fighting for their lives.
He touches the side of a dead face that used to be his sisters but the look of it seems as distant memory.
He then starts thinking if we win this battle we can get: our enemies cargo and retrieve many gifts from those around us for saving their homes and also we will have the honor of all of our enemies being destroyed!
A week after this battle we will be rich and happy! For we will have conquered our enemies and will never have to worry again! Lets defeat them!
Signed,
Frequent Answerer Sargedog
Be quiet bruh. leaave this place with this foolishness
It was "Karl Marx" who called for a proletarian revolution to overthrow the bourgeoisie and establish a classless society, since Marx felt that capitalism was an exploitative and extractive institution that was inherently unfair to working-class people.