Hay Dude
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I hope you don't really believe that, as you're substituting only the last few decades of our history for nearly two centuries of industrial revolution that put us there. We were NOT leading the world in universities or research until well after WW2, and really only as a result of WW2. The only thing that made that even possible was our manufacturing capability.
True
You could go so far as to say our contribution to WW2 was not so much in the fighting of it, as in supplying the allied forces with steel, ships, tanks, and other manufactured goods. American manufacturing is what won that war of mechanical attrician, the opposition could simply never replace lost planes, tanks, and ships as quickly as the USA.
We did make a pretty big sacrifice in lives lost and injuries. By the last year of the war, we eclipsed the axis advantages in both war machines and soldiers capabilities. Plus we had to fight in a part of the world we were not familiar with against an enemy that was dug in and established. Think D-Day. We had to overtake entrenched axis men & artillery, and we did it, despite making lots of mistakes in execution.
yeahh, but we did help rebuild those countries while they were recovering.And when the war ended, and Europe and Asia spent most of the next two decades simply recovering, we were already plowing along in the fast lane. THAT is what allowed America to finally surpass legacy world powers in building the world's leading universities and research.