Merchants of death

Merchants of death was an epithet used in the U.S. in the 1930s to attack industries and banks that supplied and funded World War I (then called the Great War).

Origin

The term originated in 1932 as the title of an article about an arms dealer named Basil Zaharoff: "Zaharoff, Merchant of Death".[1] It was then borrowed for the title of the book Merchants of Death (1934), an exposé by H. C. Engelbrecht and F. C. Hanighen.[2]

Legacy

The term was popular in antiwar circles of both the left and the right, and was used extensively regarding the Senate hearings in 1936 by the Nye Committee. The Senate hearing examined how much influence the manufacturers of armaments had in the American decision to enter World War I. Ninety-three hearings were held, over 200 witnesses were called, and little hard evidence was found. The Nye Committee came to an end when Chairman Nye accused President Woodrow Wilson of withholding information from Congress when he chose to enter World War I. The failure of the committee to find a conspiracy did not change public prejudice against the manufactures of armaments, thus the popular name "merchants of death".[3][4]

gollark: Then you would need to explicitly release it under some free software license. Which yours might not be.
gollark: Actually, the way it works is that if you program something/make some sort of creative work, you own the "intellectual property rights" or whatever to it (there's a time limit but it constantly gets extended), and have to explicitly release it as public domain/under whatever conditions for it to, well, be public domain/that.
gollark: ... it's saying what you can do with the (copyrighted) code.
gollark: It's *basically* a license in spirit.
gollark: Why is the entire first screen of it just a bizarre custom license?

See also

References

  1. Hauteclocque, Xavier (May 1932). "Zaharoff, Merchant of Death". The Living Age. 342. Littell, Son and Company. pp. 204–213?.
  2. Engelbrecht, H. C.; Hanighen, F. C. (15 June 1934). Merchants of Death (PDF). Dodd, Mead & Co. Retrieved 22 January 2018.
  3. "'Merchants of Death': September 4, 1934". United States Senate. Retrieved 4 July 2020.
  4. Safire, William (2008). Safire's Political Dictionary (Updated and expanded ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 424–425. ISBN 9780195343342.

Further reading

  • Brandes, Stuart D. (1997). Warhogs: A History of War Profits in America. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0813120201.
  • Cole, Wayne S. (1962). Senator Gerald P. Nye and American Foreign Relations. University of Minnesota Press.
  • Wiltz, John Edward (Spring 1961). "The Nye Committee Revisited". Historian. 23 (2): 211–233. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6563.1961.tb01684.x. ISSN 1540-6563.


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