Weinberg spends a lot of time explaining toe influence of public opinion on the calculations and deciwsions of British politicians in the 30s.
He lets slip at one point what this so called public opinion really meant, at volume II, p. 120. See especially fn 87.
This Weinberg slip dovetails with Quigley's Chapter on The Times, especially, in The Anglo-American Establishment.
Weinberg was certainly in a position to have cited Quigley, in 1980, but omitted a full discussion of this crucial aspect of the political, diplomatic, and propagandistic situation.
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