PC: Large-scale American Antiwar Movement in WW2

I was (and am) opposed to the Iraq War. There is nothing cowardly about opposing an unjust, illegal war waged under false pretenses. The opinion expressed was that of Turtledove, who appears to have supported the war and opposed what he perceived as the liberal media's bias against it.

I'd have put "cowardly" in quotes, then, so as to make it clear that it was Turtledove's opinion and not yours.

Anyway, unlike the anti-Vietnam War and anti-Iraq War movements of later decades, which were motivated chiefly by left-wing activists and concerns, much of OTL's (American, at least) opposition to siding with the Allies came from the right. You had a mix of old-fashioned isolationists who took Washington's words about foreign entanglements to heart, anti-communists who saw a strong, nationalist Germany as a buffer against Soviet aggression, and Nazi sympathizers who felt that America should ally with Germany and that Jewish concerns were trying to pull the two countries into war with each other. There were your left-wing labor activists who felt that the war was about bourgeois capitalist powers fighting for empire, but much of the mainstream left and even parts of the radical left were on board with fighting fascism, especially after the Soviet Union was invaded. To this day, the main proponents of revisionist histories of WWII are right-wingers like Pat Buchanan.

Any "serious" opposition to American involvement in WWII is going to come from the right. Maybe, instead of getting wracked by scandals and a reputation for violence, the Ku Klux Klan finds a way to remain a viable political force into the '30s?
 
Any "serious" opposition to American involvement in WWII is going to come from the right.

Burton K. Wheeler, a liberal isolationist Democratic Senator, was pretty serious about opposing American involvement in WWII. He lead the isolationist wing of the Democrats and turned over Roosevelt's war plans over to the Chicago Tribune.
 
How would a young Fred Phelps protest in WW2?

Though it sounds unlikely, Fred Phelps was originally a civil rights lawyer who helped end segregation in Topeka. He even received an award from a local NAACP branch. Right-wing opposition (particularly racist opposition) could conceivably turn Phelps into a supporter of the war.
 
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