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  1. Feb 3, 2024 · On the 100th anniversary of Woodrow Wilson’s death (and when the psychological soundness of leaders is as relevant as ever), Patrick Weil’s The Madman in the White House sheds light on how the mental health of this controversial American president shaped world events. In this essay, Weil reveals how a notorious psychobiography of Wilson ...

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  3. By James D. Startt. Oct 28, 2011. The irony of the moment was unmistakable. On the evening of April 2, 1917, President Woodrow Wilson delivered one of the most famous addresses in U.S. history; he asked Congress to recognize that a state of war existed between the United States and Germany.

  4. Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points. President Wilson's "Fourteen Points" speech in 1918 set a new vision for global peace during World War I. He proposed open diplomacy, free trade, disarmament, and self-determination of nations.

    • 17 min
    • Sal Khan
  5. The unpreparedness of the United States Army for war on the Western Front was directly linked to the national strategy that Woodrow Wilson charted during his presidency. The high losses of American Soldiers in the Meuse Argonne, for negligible gains, was the harvest of an incoherent and unrealistic pursued by President Wilson. Presidential leadership matters in the United States, and shapes ...

  6. The speech, known as the Fourteen Points, was developed from a set of diplomatic points by Wilson and territorial points drafted by the Inquiry’s general secretary, Walter Lippmann, and his colleagues, Isaiah Bowman, Sidney Mezes, and David Hunter Miller. Lippmann’s draft territorial points were a direct response to the secret treaties of ...

  7. After all, Wilson remarks, Americans have never been “stand-patters” who resist change. And “Prog- ress is the word that charms their ears and stirs their hearts.”. Wilson would therefore “like to make the young gentlemen of the rising generation as unlike their fathers as possible.”.

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