In the interview made by Terry Gross to Lynne Olson, they discuss Olson’s book Angry Days with Terry Gross. In her book she tries to show the difficulties underpinning the decision to enter the World War II. When Britain and France went to war with Germany in 1939, Americans felt divided about offering military aid, or joining the war. It was not until two years later, when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor and Germany declared war against the U.S., that Americans officially entered the conflict. Olson’s book is about the isolationists and the interventionists, and the opposing arguments about entering the war. The book also reviews the stories and events that occur in the two years leading up to World War II. Charles Lindbergh, a famous aviator, and the first person to fly solo across the Atlantic in 1927, was an unofficial leader of the isolation movement, an anti-war group that thought the United States should stay out of the war, and prepare the country defensively. He had lived in Europe, and has a strong personal connection with Germany. At the end of the interview, Olson mentions that “He ends up having seven children with three different women in Germany”(Olson). A leading member of the Nazi party, Hermann Goering, wanted Lindberg to tell the world that the “Luftwaffe, a Nazi air force, was an overwhelming power and that no country could really go to war successfully against Germany because they would be vanquished” (Olson). Olson admits that she is not sure whether Lindbergh was sympathetic to the Nazi ideology. She comments, “He admired the Germans' technological expertise also admired what the Germans had done in terms of reviving the country." He certainly was sympathetic to Germany, even though he allegedly did not approve of the Nazi treatment to the Jews, nor their denial of freedoms. Gross said, “My impression from your book is that he agreed that white Europeans were superior in every way to anyone else” (Gross). Olson affirmed that he was racist in the sense that he saw Northern European whites as superior. As a result, he th