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  by 
	compazine
 December 11, 2010
 
	from
	
	YouTube Website 
	  
	  
	Controversial historian Professor Niall Ferguson argues that in the last 
	century there were not in fact two World Wars and a Cold War, but a single 
	Hundred Years’ War.
 
 It was not nationalism that powered the conflicts of the century, but 
	empires. It was not ideologies of class or the advent of socialism driving 
	the century, but race.
 
 Ultimately, ethnic conflict underpinned 20th-century violence.
 
	  
	Finally, it 
	was not the west that triumphed as the century progressed - in fact, power 
	slowly and steadily migrated towards the new empires of the East.
 
		
			
			
			The Clash of Empires 
			An alternative perspective to the events 
			of the 20th century, offering different explanations for the two 
			world wars and the shifting balance of power as the 1900s 
			progressed.  
			  
			He begins by studying the origins of World War One, 
			arguing that the conflict sparked racial hatred which was exploited 
			by nation states for their own ends.
 
			
			A Tainted Triumph 
			The last years of World War Two, 
			considering the terrible ethical compromises the Allied nations were 
			forced to make to defeat their German and Japanese enemies, and the 
			long-term consequences for the victors.
 
			
			The Icebox 
			How during the Cold War, World War Three 
			actually took place.  
			  
			With the US and the Soviet Union unable to 
			engage in battle with each other directly for fear of the nuclear 
			consequences, Third World nations ended up serving as proxies for 
			the superpowers, causing carnage to rival World War One.
 
			
			The Plan 
			How the US became the envy of the world 
			in the aftermath of World War One, a state of affairs that was 
			shattered by the Wall Street crash.  
			  
			He also considers the effect of 
			the Great Depression on people’s attitudes to capitalism and 
			democracy, and how it led to the rise of totalitarian states.
 
			
			Killing Space 
			How the rise of the Axis powers led to a 
			fundamental redrawing of the world map.  
			  
			He pinpoints 1942 as a 
			pivotal year, and considers how the 20th century might have unfolded 
			had World War Two ended differently, with totalitarian regimes 
			dividing the globe between them
 
			
			The Descent of the West 
			Controversial historian Professor Niall 
			Ferguson concludes the series by challenging the received wisdom 
			that the fall of the Berlin Wall represented ultimate triumph for 
			Western values, pointing to racial conflict in the last decades of 
			the 20th century.  
			  
			He also considers the possibility of a further 
			global war in the future. 
	  
	
 
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