This is the sixth in a series of blogs on my intent to vote not only for President Obama, but a straight Democratic ticket at the national, state, and local levels. I plan to look at issues that are important to me and I believe important to the American people.
I welcome your responses, whether you are a Democrat, Republican, or something else. I will publish whatever comments you have unless they are mean-spirited or do not speak directly to the issue addressed in this particular blog.
Something a friend sent me yesterday prompted me to look back at the presidential election campaign of 1936. Some of you already know what that “something” was. Even though I hadn't yet been born, I grew up in that year’s shadow and yesterday felt a seventy-six year old wind rustling fall leaves in the 2012 elections already under way.
In 1936 the Great
Depression was in its eighth year. President Franklin Roosevelt had been in
office for four years and running for his second term. He was still working to
push his New Deal economic policies through congress
and the courts. Despite the passage of Social Security and unemployment
benefits, unemployment stood at 16.9%,
well down from the high of 24% at the depth of the Depression but still four
times higher what it had been when Herbert Hoover took office in 1928.
The desperate economic
conditions FDR inherited in 1932 were exacerbated by the Dust
Bowl, the
catastrophic dust storms on the southern plains in the 1930s, especially
between 1934 and 1936, caused by drought and decades of farming that had
displaced the native grasses that kept the soil in place. Although the
meteorological epicenter was a relatively small area in the panhandles of Texas
and Oklahoma, southwestern Kansas and southeastern Colorado, the effects
rippled through an already crippled nation. Tons of dust from the Bowl fell as
far as New York City and the Atlantic Ocean. Hundreds of thousands of people
had to abandon their homes and farms causing a major social dislocation. The
title of Timothy Egan’s chronicle, The
Worst Hard Time,
was not an overstatement.
Alf Landon was the
Republican candidate running against Roosevelt. Kansas Governor Landon was what
would become a vanishing breed of “liberal Republicans.” (Does anyone know what
former Governor Romney really stands for?) Most of the attacks on Roosevelt and Social Security
were from the Republican machine. Landon admired much of the New Deal but complained
that it was hostile to business, involved too much waste and was
inefficient.
Against the 1936
background, what I received yesterday makes even more sense: it was a link to a
warning to the nation President
Roosevelt issued in his 1936 campaign. I resisted the impulse to print the
one and a half minute text because I believe it better to hear FDR’s voice.
Over these seventy-six years, I had to remind myself that he wasn't speaking to
us in 2012.
Watch and listen to it;
see if you don’t think it has a most contemporary ring! It is one of the
reasons I plan to vote Democratic in this election. What about you?
-
Milo
1 comment:
A friend sent me this clip of some more insightful humor from FDR: http://www.youtube.com/embed/FPBoaQdC040
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