You clearly know nothing about WW1 if you think America won it for the Allies. It was basically all British blockading and French battlefield prowess, American presence was negligible.
WWII doc about literally anything german
>EUROPE WAS UNDER THE NAZI JACKBOOT
It's this one?
youtube.com
>Hitler's Addiction: Evil Has A Vice
>Hitler's Army: The Forces of Evil
>Hitler and the SS: Henchmen of Evil
>Hitler Youth: Evil Knows No Age
>Hitler and the Magic Beanstalk: Evil Takes Root
>Hitler's Last Dance: Argentina Boogaloo
America didn't "win it for the allies" as in winning the whole war alone or anything, but American money and supplies tipped the balance in 1917, the war was largely a stalemate at the time and in some ways was starting to favor the Central Powers, with the Russian Empire falling to pieces and Germany potentially being able to redirect all its forces in the East back to the West. American shipping favoring the Entente was already putting the Germans in a bad position which is why they made the decision to launch unrestricted submarine warfare against American shipping to begin with.
Here's a British source written in 1920 breaking it down, literally says "The entry of the United States saved the day." on page 187. But it's in a purely financial context. American bankers were the ones who made the difference, not American soldiers.
archive.org
archive.org
Kind of why the German stab-in-the-back myth centering on financiers/wealthy jews got so much traction. It wasn't really inaccurate.
imagine being this autistic
I thought so too, but recently studying the subject in an actual academic context has hammered home the important role America played in not having it all fall apart at the last second.
>Modern day WW2 documentaries
>They use Trump as a modern equivalent to Hitler
And yes it did happen on WW2 in color on Netflix
>Adolf Hitler Day Off