Independence Day (2) Vice-President Henry Wallace on ":The Century of the Common Man" (1942)
Emphasis mine, with reference to the current occupant of the White House (jmp)
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"The Century of the Common Man"
Henry A. Wallace's speech articulating the goals of the war for the
allies. From his book The Century of the Common Man. New York: Reynal &
Hitchcock, 1943.
This is a fight between a slave world and a free world. Just as the
United States in 1862 could not remain half slave and half free, so in 1942 the
world must make its decision for a complete victory one way or the other.
As we begin the final stages of this fight to the death between the free
world and the slave world, it is worth while to refresh our minds about the
march of freedom for the common man. The idea of freedom — the freedom that we
in the United States know and love so well — is derived from the Bible with its
extraordinary emphasis on the dignity of the individual. Democracy is the only
true political expression of Christianity.
The prophets of the Old Testament were the first to preach social
justice. But that which was sensed by the prophets many centuries before Christ
was not given complete and powerful political expression until our nation was
formed as a Federal Union a century and a half ago. Even then, the march of the
common people had just begun. Most of them did not yet know how to read and
write. There were no public schools to which all children could go. Men and
women can not be really free until they have plenty to eat, and time and
ability to read and think and talk things over. Down the years, the people of
the United States have moved steadily forward in the practice of democracy.
Through universal education, they now can read and write and form opinions of
their own. They have learned, and are still learning, the art of production —
that is, how to make a living. They have learned, and are still learning, the
art of self-government.
If we were to measure freedom by standards of nutrition, education and
self-government, we might rank the United States and certain nations of Western
Europe very high. But this would not be fair to other nations where education
had become widespread only in the last twenty years. In many nations, a
generation ago, nine out of ten of the people could not read or write. Russia,
for example, was changed from an illiterate to a literate nation within one
generation and, in the process, Russia's appreciation of freedom was enormously
enhanced. In China, the increase during the past thirty years in the ability of
the people to read and write has been matched by their increased interest in
real liberty.
Everywhere, reading and writing are accompanied by industrial progress
sooner or later inevitably brings a strong labor movement. From a long-time and
fundamental point of view, there are no backward peoples which are lacking in
mechanical sense. Russians, Chinese, and the Indians both of India and the
Americas all learn to read and write and operate machines just as well as your
children and my children. Everywhere the common people are on the march.
Thousands of them are learning to read and write, learning to think together,
learning to use tools. These people are learning to think and work together in
labor movements, some of which may be extreme or impractical at first, but
which eventually will settle down to serve effectively the interests of the common
man.
When the freedom-loving people march; when the farmers have an
opportunity to buy land at reasonable prices and to sell the produce of their
land through their own organizations, when workers have the opportunity to form
unions and bargain through them collectively, and when the children of all the
people have an opportunity to attend schools which teach them truths of the
real world in which they live — when these opportunities are open to everyone,
then the world moves straight ahead.
But in countries where the ability to read and write has been recently
acquired or where the people have had no long experience in governing
themselves on the basis of their own thinking, it is easy for demagogues to
arise and prostitute the mind of the common man to their own base ends. Such a
demagogue may get financial help from some person of wealth who is unaware of
what the end result will be. With this backing, the demagogue may dominate the
minds of the people, and, from whatever degree of freedom they have, lead them
backward into slavery. Herr Thyssen, the wealthy German steel man, little
realized what he was doing when he gave Hitler enough money to enable him to
play on the minds of the German people. The demagogue is the curse of the
modern world, and of all the demagogues, The worst are those financed by
well-meaning wealthy men who sincerely believe that their wealth is likely to
be safer if they can hire men with political "it" to change the sign
posts and lure the people back into slavery of the most degraded kind.
Unfortunately for the wealthy men who finance movements of this sort, as well
as for the people themselves, The successful demagogue is a powerful genie who,
when once let out of his bottle, refuses to obey anyone's command. As long as
his spell holds, he defies God Himself, and Satan is turned loose upon the
world.
Through the leaders of the Nazi revolution, Satan now is trying to lead
the common man of the whole world back into slavery and darkness. For the stark
truth is that the violence preached by the Nazis is the devil's own religion of
darkness. So also is the doctrine that one race or one class is by heredity
superior and that all other races or classes are supposed to be slaves. THE
belief in one Satan-inspired Fuhrer, with his Quislings, his Lavals, and his
Mussolinis — his "gauleiters" in every nation in the world — is the
last and ultimate darkness. Is there any hell hotter than that of being a
Quisling, unless it is that of being a Laval or a Mussolini?
In a twisted sense, there is something almost great in the figure of the
Supreme Devil operating through a human form, in a Hitler who has the daring to
spit straight into the eye of God and man. But the Nazi system has a heroic
position for only one leader. By definition only one person is allowed to
retain full sovereignty over his own soul. All the rest are stooges — they are
stooges who have been mentally and politically degraded, and who feel that they
can get square with the world only by mentally and politically degrading other
people. These stooges are really psychopathic cases. Satan has turned loose
upon us the insane.
The march of freedom of the past one hundred and fifty years has been a
long-drawn-out people's revolution. In this Great Revolution of the people,
there were the American Revolution of 1775, The French Revolution of 1792, The
Latin-American revolutions of the Bolivarian era, The German Revolution of
1848, and the Russian Revolution of 1917. Each spoke for the common man in
terms of blood on the battlefield. Some went to excess. But the significant
thing is that the people groped their way to the light. More of them learned to
think and work together.
The people's revolution aims at peace and not at violence, but if the
rights of the common man are attacked, it unleashed the ferocity of a she-bear
who has lost a cub. When the Nazi psychologists tell their master Hitler that
we in the United States may be able to produce hundreds of thousands of planes,
but that we have no will to fight, they are only fooling themselves and him.
The truth is that when the rights of the American people are transgressed, as
those rights have been transgressed, The American people will fight with a
relentless fury which will drive the ancient Teutonic gods back cowering into
their caves. The Götterdämmerung has come for Odin and his crew.
The people are on the march toward even fuller freedom than the most
fortunate peoples of the earth have hitherto enjoyed. No Nazi
counter-revolution will stop it. The common man will smoke the Hitler stooges
out into the open in the United States, in Latin America, and in India. He will
destroy their influence. No Lavals, no Mussolinis will be tolerated in a Free
World.
The people, in their millennial and revolutionary march toward
manifesting here on earth the dignity that is in every human soul, hold as
their credo the Four Freedoms enunciated by President Roosevelt in his message
to Congress on January 6, 1941. These four freedoms are the very core of the
revolution for which the United Nations have taken their stand. We who live in
the United States may think there is nothing very revolutionary about freedom
of religion, freedom of expression, and freedom from the fear of secret police.
But when we begin to think about the significance of freedom from want for the
average man, then we know that the revolution of the past one hundred and fifty
years has not been completed, either here in the United States or in any other
nation in the world. We know that this revolution can not stop until freedom
from want has actually been attained.
And now, as we move forward toward realizing the Four Freedoms of this
people's revolution, I would like to speak about four duties. It is my belief
that every freedom, every right, every privilege has its price, its
corresponding duty without which it can not be enjoyed. The four duties of the
people's revolution, as I see them today, are these:
1. The duty to produce the
limit.
2. The duty to transport as
rapidly as possible to the field of battle.
3. The duty to fight with all
that is in us.
4. The duty to build a peace —
just, charitable and enduring.
The fourth duty is that which inspires the other three.
We failed in our job after World War Number One. We did not know how to
go about it to build an enduring world-wide peace. We did not have the nerve to
follow through and prevent Germany from rearming. We did not insist that she
"learn war no more." We did not build a peace treaty on the
fundamental doctrine of the people's revolution. We did not strive
whole-heartedly to create a world where there could be freedom from want for
all peoples. But by our very errors we learned much, and after this war we
shall be in position to utilize our knowledge in building a world which is
economically, politically and, I hope, spiritually sound.
Modern science, which is a by-product and an essential part of the
people's revolution, has made it technologically possible to see that all of
the people of the world get enough to eat. Half in fun and half seriously, I
said the other day to Madame Litvinov: "The object of this war is to make
sure that everybody in the world has the privilege of drinking a quart of milk
a day." She replied: "Yes, even half a pint." The peace must
mean a better standard of living for the common man, not merely in the United
States and England, but also in India, Russia, China and Latin America — not
merely in the United Nations, but also in Germany and Italy and Japan.
Some have spoken of the "American Century." I say that the
century on which we are entering — The century which will come out of this war
— can be and must be the century of the common man. Perhaps it will be
America's opportunity to suggest that Freedoms and duties by which the common
man must live. Everywhere the common man must learn to build his own industries
with his own hands is a practical fashion. Everywhere the common man must learn
to increase his productivity so that he and his children can eventually pay to
the world community all that they have received. No nation will have the
God-given right to exploit other nations. Older nations will have the privilege
to help younger nations get started on the path to industrialization, but there
must be neither military nor economic imperialism. The methods of the
nineteenth century will not work in the people's century which is now about to
begin. India, China, and Latin America have a tremendous stake in the people's
century. As their masses learn to read and write, and as they become productive
mechanics, their standard of living will double and treble. Modern science,
when devoted whole-heartedly to the general welfare, has in it potentialities
of which we do not yet dream.
And modern science must be released from German slavery. International
cartels that serve American greed and the German will to power must go. Cartels
in the peace to come must be subjected to international control for the common
man, as well as being under adequate control by the respective home
governments. In this way, we can prevent the Germans from again building a war
machine while we sleep. With international monopoly pools under control, it will
be possible for inventions to serve all the people instead of only a few.
Yes, and when the time of peace comes, The citizen will again have a
duty, The supreme duty of sacrificing the lesser interest for the greater
interest of the general welfare. Those who write the peace must think of the
whole world. There can be no privileged peoples. We ourselves in the United
States are no more a master race than the Nazis. And we can not perpetuate
economic warfare without planting the seeds of military warfare. We must use
our power at the peace table to build an economic peace that is just,
charitable and enduring.
If we really believe that we are fighting for a people's peace, all the
rest becomes easy. Production, yes — it will be easy to get production without
either strikes or sabotage, production with the whole-hearted cooperation
between willing arms and keen brains; enthusiasm, zip, energy geared to the
tempo of keeping at it everlastingly day after day. Hitler knows as well as
those of us who sit in on the War Production Board meetings that we here in the
United States are winning the battle of production. He knows that both labor
and business in the United States are doing a most remarkable job and that his
only hope is to crash through to a complete victory some time during the next
six months.
And then there is the task of transportation to the line of battle by
truck, by railroad car, by ship. We shall joyously deny ourselves so that our
transportation system is improved by at least thirty percent.
I need say little about the duty to fight. Some people declare, and
Hitler believes, that the American people have grown soft in the last
generation. Hitler agents continually preach in South America that we are
cowards, unable to use, like the "brave" German soldiers, the weapons
of modern war. It is true that American youth hates war with a holy hatred. But
because of that fact and because Hitler and the German people stand as the very
symbol of war, we shall fight with a tireless enthusiasm until war and the
possibility of war have been removed from this planet. We shall cleanse the
plague spot of Europe, which is Hitler's Germany, and with it the hell-hole of
Asia — Japan.
No compromise with Satan is possible. We shall not rest until all the
victims under the Nazi yoke are freed. We shall fight for a complete peace as
well as a complete victory.
The people's revolution is on the march, and the devil and all his
angels can not prevail against it. They can not prevail, for on the side of the
people is the Lord.
"He giveth power to the faint; to them that have no might He
increaseth strength.... They that wait upon the Lord shall mount up with wings
as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; they shall walk and not be
faint."
Strong in the strength of the Lord, we who fight in the people's cause
will never stop until that cause is won.
(May 8, 1942)
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