FDR's `New
Deal':
An Example of
American System Economics
by Hartmut
Cramer
This speech appeared in the
June 16, 2000 issue
of Executive Intelligence Review.
The following speech was
delivered to the conference of the Schiller Institute and
International Caucus of Labor Committees in Bad Schwalbach, Germany
on May 28, 2000. Subheads and footnotes have been added.
The core of what I am going
to say is, that contrary to all lies about Franklin Delano
Roosevelt's "New Deal"--and there are many of these flying around,
especially here in Europe--it was a very good, though by no means
perfect, example of the American System of economics. That may seem
to be a quite unusual statement about a member of one of the leading
patrician U.S. families, especially since this family had produced a
President--Theodore Roosevelt, FDR's cousin--who was an outright
disaster, betraying the United States to the British Empire, against
which the Founding Fathers had fought--and won--a bitter war,
because the colonial British system of looting and the humanist
American system of nation-building cannot coexist. Not on one
continent, not on the same planet, and ultimately not in the same
universe.
What I will present to you
here in a brief, but I think convincing manner, is that, because of
a profound personal crisis, the gifted, but primarily pro-British,
young Franklin Roosevelt developed his personality in such an
extraordinary way, that he was emotionally strong and courageous
enough to lead his nation out of a deep crisis--a crisis, bordering
even on complete disintegration of the country. This he accomplished
by using dirigist methods, with which he launched great
infrastructure projects to reconstruct the economy and build the
nation: proven methods, which go back to the early days of the
American Revolution.
This is the real New Deal of
FDR, which in principle was nothing new. In preparing this report, I
could rely very much on the groundbreaking research our organization
has done on Franklin Roosevelt: Apart from Lyndon LaRouche's
writings and speeches on this subject, I refer to the work of Lonnie
Wolfe and Marsha Freeman, but especially the detailed work of
Richard Freeman on FDR's economic policy--most of it unpublished so
far, which, I hope, will change very soon.
One preliminary note: As we
have discussed here so much about the importance of music and the
principles of Classical composition, please keep in the back of your
mind--while I am speaking about how President Roosevelt led the U.S.
out of the Depression--LaRouche's present policies, as sort of
"thorough-bass line." This exercise in "political counterpoint" will
help you to understand more about FDR and his fight--and its
significance for us today--than I could express in words.
In the first four decades of
his life, everything went "normally" for Roosevelt. Being part of
one of the top U.S. families, he largely fulfilled the expectations
of his pro-British "class": top education, sports, frequent travels
to Europe. Although some unusual points do emerge: the fact that he
greatly admired his great-great-grandfather, "Isaac the Patriot,"
who had fought for the American Revolution with the Founding Fathers
and who was very close to Alexander Hamilton; the fact that FDR was
proud that his ancestors had been Revolutionaries, and that his
father, an owner of a railway company, had been active in the
nation-building circles of Lincoln; and that he wrote his Harvard
paper on Hamilton, in which he showed that he understood the
significance of a dirigist economic policy for building a nation.
But at the time he
went into politics, the "Roosevelt Clan" had nothing to fear. FDR,
who greatly admired his cousin Teddy, was on a clear pro-British
line, and Teddy personally saw to it, that it remained so during
Franklin's two terms as Assistant Secretary of the Navy.
Nevertheless, during this time--the time of World War I--FDR got a
good lesson on the significance of physical economy, in the form of
his country's mobilization for war. But otherwise he was an "awfully
mean cuss"--as he was to recall later--an arrogant young aristocrat,
who at the outbreak of war, in a letter to his wife Eleanor,
ridiculed the fact, that his boss, Secretary of the Navy Daniels,
was feeling "very sad that his faith in human nature and
civilization and similar idealistic nonsense was receiving such a
rude shock." He exhibited some of this behavior to the outside
world, as a cold-blooded lawyer, a stiff politician, and a mean and
arrogant Assistant Secretary of the Navy. No wonder, the "Roosevelt
Clan" considered him one of "their class." That he would become
President and work in their favor, was a given; it was just a
question of time, manipulation--and money.[1]
The Polio
Years: A Time for Reflection
But then, disaster struck:
In August 1921, Franklin Roosevelt, at the age of 39, was stricken
with poliomyelitis. Overnight he had become a poor, crippled man,
with almost no expectation to recover and lead a normal life, let
alone become President. But, what at first seemed a catastrophe,
turned out to be, according to Eleanor, a "blessing in disguise."
FDR used this deep personal crisis, and the healthy distance it
placed him from day-to-day politics, in the most constructive way.
With enormous willpower, he not only fought to restore his health,
and to learn to walk again, but he also thought things through. He
re-studied the history of the American Revolution and wrote papers:
one on U.S. history, in which he treated America as an extended part
of the development of European civilization, singling out as one
crucial aspect, for instance, "Louis XI of France, who put down the
power of the great feudal lords."
The personality emerging
after this years-long battle for physical--and mental--survival, was
quite different than the "mean cuss." Roosevelt is still a
patrician, but one, who is proud having just learned again how to
stand up, humbly accepting the help of his doctor and that of his
black servant; a politician heartily laughing while walking on
crutches; a New York Governor honestly listening to the proverbial
"forgotten man"; a feisty Democratic candidate campaigning even in
heavy rain; a dedicated U.S. President, strongly attacking the
"economic royalists" of Wall Street.
To grasp the very nature of
this change--and it was a big change, a non-linear development--just
think about what the crucial passage of the Declaration of
Independence on the "inalienable rights" of man, among them "life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," as well as the General
Welfare clause of the U.S. Constitution meant for the arrogant
patrician--just a big persona--and how different this mature man,
who, after having to fight through an existential crisis, had become
a real person, a personality, thought--and especially felt--about
the same concepts.
After that experience,
Roosevelt was emotionally capable of thinking through what was
needed to successfully confront an existential crisis of the nation.
And such a crisis was clearly looming just over the horizon, toward
the end of the 1920s. No wonder, that FDR during this time came in
contact with politicians, who fought to solve the economic crisis
with policies in the tradition of the American System and Lincoln's
famous program for "internal improvements," the catchword for the
nation's infrastructural development. To these people, who later
played a big role in the New Deal, belonged: George Norris, who had
fought for the TVA and rural electrification for a decade; William
Lemke, an energetic fighter for Hamiltonian credit policies; and
Robert Wagner, who fought for the development of labor power.
It is also no wonder, that
FDR around that time openly broke with the imperialist policies of
his class. In a July 1928 article in Foreign Affairs on
future U.S. foreign policy, Roosevelt proposed a "Good Neighbor"
policy, i.e., respect for the sovereignty of other countries--a
clear blow to the British. The shape of FDR's future policy became
visible: As a U.S. patrician, Roosevelt knew all the "rules of the
game" very well from the inside. Being intellectually brilliant, it
was clear to him, that no other big power, not even the British
Empire, could match America, if the U.S. developed its economy,
including its military; as a patriot, he saw no reason that the U.S.
should act as the dumb "brawn to British brains," once the power of
Wall Street was broken by a strong President; and his political
instinct--greatly sharpened by the development of his
character--told him, that the broad support, which such a President
needed, could only come from mobilizing and educating the majority
of the American people, especially the skilled workers and farmers,
the small businessmen, the millions of unemployed and their family
members--the proverbial "forgotten man."
That FDR was prepared to
seize the right moment--a big crisis--and capture his Democratic
Party, which at the top was controlled by the "money-changers" of
Wall Street, he wrote in a letter to a friend after his inauguration
as Governor of New York early in 1929, long before "Black Friday"
(and a comparison to the present is not only permitted, but
welcome). Roosevelt: "You are right that the business community is
not much interested in good government and it wants the present
Republican control to continue just so long as the stock market
soars and the new combinations of capital are left undisturbed. The
trouble before Republican leaders is that prevailing conditions are
bound to come to an end some time. When that time comes, I want to
see the Democratic Party sanely radical enough to have most of the
disgruntled ones turn to it to put us in power again."
The Promise
of a `New Deal'
On July 2, 1932, on
accepting the nomination as Democratic Presidential candidate, FDR
made his famous promise of a "New Deal" for the American people. And
what a dramatic shift this policy was intended to be becomes clear,
when we hear FDR himself. Again: Think about the counterpoint of the
"LaRouchean thorough-bass" singing in the back of your head:
"Let us . . . highly
resolve to resume the country's interrupted march along the path
of real progress, of real justice, of real equality for all of
our citizens, great and small. . . . There are two ways of
viewing the government's duty in matters affecting economic and
social life. The first sees to it that a favored few are helped,
and hopes that some of their prosperity will leak through . . .
to labor, to the farmer, to the small businessman. That theory
belongs to the party of Toryism. . . . But it is not, and never
will be the theory of the Democratic Party.
"The people of this
country want a genuine choice this year; not a choice between
two names for the same reactionary doctrine. . . . What do the
people of America want more than anything else? Two things:
Work; work, with all the moral and spiritual values that go with
work. And with work, a reasonable measure of security--security
for themselves, and for their wives and children. Work and
security . . . are the spiritual values, the true goal toward
which our efforts of reconstruction should lead. Throughout the
nation, men and women, forgotten in the political philosophy of
the government of the last years, look to us here for guidance
and for more equitable opportunity to share in the distribution
of national wealth. . . . Those millions cannot and shall not
hope in vain. I pledge to you, I pledge to myself, to a New
Deal for the American people. This is more than a political
campaign, it is a call to arms. Give me your help, not to win
votes alone, but to win in this crusade to restore America to
its own people" (emphasis added).
No wonder, that the
breathtaking development of the first months after FDR had taken
office in March 1933, was widely called the "Roosevelt Revolution";
in fact, it was one: a new phase of the American Revolution. (As the
President told the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1938:
"Remember, remember always, that all of us--and you and I
especially--are descended from immigrants and revolutionists.")
This theme, that he would
seize the moment of crisis to take away power from Wall Street,
Roosevelt hammered home during his entire election campaign of 1932:
"I believe, that our industrial and economic system is made for
individual men and women, and not individual men and women for the
benefit of the system," FDR said in August in Ohio, and continued:
"I believe, that the individual should have full liberty of action
to make the most of himself; but I do not believe, that in the name
of that sacred word, a few powerful interests should be permitted to
make industrial cannon fodder of the lives of half of the population
of the United States."
At the end of September
1932, as the economic and financial crisis deepened and even more
banks failed, with many citizens losing their savings, FDR said:
"Every man has a right to his own property, which means a right to
be assured, to the fullest extent attainable, in the safety of his
savings. . . . If, in accord with this principle, we must restrict
the operations of the speculator, the manipulator, even the
financier, I believe we must accept the restriction as needful, not
to hamper individualism, but to protect it."
This he repeated throughout
his campaign: to labor and farmers, the unemployed and homeless,
small businessmen and industrialists, and also to America's blacks,
whom he congratulated for the "truly remarkable things" they had
accomplished, "their progress in agriculture and industry, their
achievement in the field of education, their contributions to the
arts and sciences." He told America's students, "Human resources are
above physical resources," and that "knowledge--that is, education
in its true sense--is our best protection against unreasoning,
prejudice, and panic-making fear, whether engendered by special
interests, illiberal minorities, or panic-stricken leaders." This
latter remark, issued in Boston at the end of October, was a clear
reference to the panic which meanwhile had gripped Wall Street,
since it was clear, that Franklin Roosevelt had won over the
majority of the U.S. population to his program of reconstruction,
and was to carry the November elections; which he did--by a
landslide.
`Nothing To
Fear But Fear Itself'
The panic on Wall
Street and especially in London now reached a fever pitch, since in
continental Europe the oligarchs had to stage a fascist coup to kill
the "German New Deal"--the "Lautenbach Plan"--by hastily bringing
Hitler to power; in the U.S. these forces sent a clear message to
Roosevelt on Feb. 15, 1933--in the form of bullets.[2]
Since the frontal attack on Roosevelt did not succeed, Wall Street
and London organized a run on the dollar and gold reserves of the
U.S. In the four months following FDR's election, the country was
almost bankrupted, mainly because the Depression and financial
crisis took its toll, but also because the international financial
oligarchy destabilized the U.S. to "get FDR back in line."
When Franklin D. Roosevelt
was finally inaugurated on Saturday, March 4, 1933, the country was
ruined. Almost all banking activities had ceased; the financial
system was disintegrating; industrial production had collapsed;
agriculture barely existed any more; many of the 12.8 million
unemployed (this figure was not only in absolute numbers, but also
relative--officially it stood at 25%--much higher than in Germany
then) were wandering around homeless, hungry, even starving. A mood
of utter despair had gripped the country.
Roosevelt, in less than one
hour, turned the mood in the country around, with his inaugural
address: "This is preeminently the time to speak the truth, the
whole truth, frankly and boldly. Nor need we shrink from honestly
facing conditions in our country today. This great Nation will
endure as it has endured, will revive and will prosper. So, first
let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is
fear itself--nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which
paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance."
After that powerful
introduction, Roosevelt went on to establish truth, by asking the
population to "support my leadership in these critical days," and
then painting with rough, but clear strokes the reality of the
country's deep crisis. Then FDR exposed the real culprits, the
oligarchical financial interests: "Practices of the unscrupulous
money-changers stand indicted in the court of public opinion,
rejected by the hearts and minds of men. . . . Faced by failure of
credit they have proposed only the lending of more money. . . . They
know only the rules of a generation of self-seekers. They have no
vision, and when there is no vision, the people perish. The
money-changers have fled from their high seats in the temple of our
civilization. We may now restore that temple to the ancient truths.
The measure of the restoration lies in the extent to which we apply
social values more noble than mere monetary profits."
After this ruthless attack,
FDR reminded the American people of one of the most important
philosophical concepts of the U.S. Declaration of Independence--the
pursuit of happiness--and elaborated it in the true
Leibnizian sense of Glückseligkeit. For Leibniz Glück
(luck) and Glückseligkeit (happiness) are the same concept:
that elevated state of mind where the soul is striving for
perfection and reason, i.e., creativity. Thus Roosevelt said:
"Happiness lies not in the mere possession of money; it lies in the
joy of achievement, in the thrill of creative effort. The joy and
moral stimulation of work no longer must be forgotten in the mad
chase of evanescent profits."
Acknowledging that "changes
in ethics alone" are not enough, he said:
"This Nation asks for
action, and action now. Our greatest primary task is to put
people to work. This is no unsolvable problem. . . . It can be
accomplished in part by direct recruiting by the Government
itself, treating the task as we would treat the emergency of a
war, but at the same time, through this employment,
accomplishing greatly needed projects to stimulate and
reorganize the use of our natural resources." He then announced
measures to improve the situation in agriculture and industry,
debt relief for farms and private houses, as well as relief
efforts for the needy. And he promised measures for "national
planning"--Roosevelt's word for dirigism; another one he often
used was "planned action"--"for and supervision of all forms of
transportation and of communications and other utilities [like
electricity] which have a definitely public character."
Coming to the heart of the
New Deal, FDR announced "strict supervision of all banking and
credits and investments" and "an end to speculation with other
people's money." Now his language gets even tougher:
"These are the lines of
attack. I shall presently urge upon a new Congress in special
session detailed measures for their fulfillment. . . . With this
pledge taken, I assume unhesitatingly the leadership of this
great army of our people dedicated to a disciplined attack upon
our common problems."
The war on Wall Street was
declared, but FDR wouldn't stop here. "I am prepared under my
constitutional duty to recommend the measures that a stricken nation
in the midst of a stricken world may require," he said, adding:
"But in the event . . .
that the national emergency is still critical, I shall not evade
the clear course of duty that will then confront me. I shall ask
the Congress for the one remaining instrument to meet the
crisis--broad Executive power to wage a war against the
emergency, as great as the power that would be given to me if we
were in fact invaded by a foreign foe."
FDR's `First
100 Days'
With that speech, the "war
against the Depression" was officially launched. And Roosevelt
escalated it: Returning from his inauguration--and taking a leaf
from Machiavelli's Prince--that in a fundamental crisis the
most difficult political decisions have to be executed at once--he
rapidly fired one shot after the other. This momentum was
characteristic especially of his "First 100 Days," during which he
pushed through 13 important legislative measures.
Over the weekend, FDR
drafted emergency legislation to deal with the financial crisis. On
Monday he announced a four-day "banking holiday" and the issuance of
his Emergency Banking Act of 1933, which put the entire U.S. banking
system through an orderly bankruptcy reorganization. On Thursday,
March 9, this bill was voted up in both chambers of Congress and
signed into law by the President. The American people experienced
that Washington could deal effectively with a deep crisis in a
single day! (Again, think about the "LaRouchean counterpoint.")
Apart from opening up banks successively in the next days--relative
to the gravity of their problems--and putting them for some time
under government control, this bill established, that the hopelessly
bankrupt banks remained closed forever.
Roosevelt expanded this
emergency legislation: Commercial banks were strictly separated from
investment houses, so by law they could not "speculate with other
people's money." This effort culminated in the famous Glass-Steagall
Act of June 1933, which not only established sound banking
practices, but also greatly weakened Wall Street's grip over U.S.
financial policy. Then FDR reorganized the Federal Reserve system by
having its governors appointed by the U.S. President. The result of
this financial reorganization was not the establishment of a U.S.
National Bank--FDR apparently considered it to be politically too
hot at that time--but that government could issue credit to finance
public works and large-scale infrastructure projects.
Even if limited, these
measures weakened the Wall Street interests considerably. How was
Roosevelt able to do this? By launching a critical flanking attack.
One of his political allies, Ferdinand Pecora, in early 1933, became
counsel to special hearings of the Senate Banking Committee. And in
these hearings held in the next months, he aggressively exposed the
Morgan interests as having been the center of a "secret" government
of the U.S.--a small group of Wall Street interests which
effectively controlled the country's politics. Due to Pecora's
grilling of J.P. Morgan personally, Wall Street's dirty machinations
of bribing the entire political class of the U.S. became known in
detail! Pecora's revelations were a political sensation during FDR's
"First 100 Days." Morgan and Wall Street were put on the defensive,
exactly at the time when FDR was reorganizing the U.S. banking
system.
With these bold measures,
Roosevelt had worked himself and the nation out of almost-hopeless
financial chaos and had pinned down Wall Street to such an extent,
that he could issue credits for his reconstruction program. These he
channelled mainly through the Reconstruction Finance Corporation,
which had been established in early 1932 by a panicked President
Herbert Hoover to bail out a bankrupt banking system. Roosevelt
instead used the RFC for productive purposes: to channel money into
projects with a "multiplier effect" on the nation's entire physical
economy. In effect, FDR made the RFC into a model for the
Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau [the Reconstruction Credit Bank,
established in Germany at the end of World War II, to finance the
rebuilding of the war-torn country].
Franklin Roosevelt initiated
numerous measures for national reconstruction. Overall, the various
institutions he created built about 50,000 infrastructure
projects--small, medium, big, and very big ones--and he was very
conscious about what he was doing: "We are definitely in an era of
building, the best kind of building--the building of great projects
for the benefit of the public and with the definite objective of
building human happiness," he said in a radio address in August
1934: "We know more and more that the . . . Nation must and shall be
considered as a whole."
Concretely, Roosevelt
attacked the problem on two levels: First, emergency measures, such
as social relief programs and make-work programs of all kinds,
urgently needed to prevent millions of Americans from literally
starving, and give them work--any work. Secondly, on a strategic
level, were those measures to reconstruct and develop the country's
totally ruined infrastructure.
Great
Infrastructure Projects
In terms of large-scale
planning and realization of big "hard" infrastructure projects being
carried out under the New Deal, the best examples are the results of
the Public Works Administration (PWA), and the almost legendary
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), both of which, President Roosevelt
ran, more or less directly. The PWA, run by FDR's close ally Harold
Ickes, became, with its "multiplier-effect" and first two-year
budget of $3.3 billion--then an enormous sum--the driving force of
America's biggest construction effort up to that date. For every
worker on a PWA project, almost two additional workers were employed
elsewhere--productively. The PWA carried out the electrification of
rural America, the building of canals, tunnels, bridges, highways,
streets, sewage systems, and housing areas, as well as hospitals,
schools, and universities. To give you an idea of the
"multiplier-effect" of the PWA: Every year it used up roughly half
of the concrete and one-third of the steel of the entire nation!
The development of the huge
Tennessee River basin in the South by the TVA was a model for what a
modern nation can accomplish. The plans for the infrastructural
development of this poor, malaria-stricken region--potentially a
very rich area because of its minerals and water, plus its labor
power--went back to the time of the American Revolution. By stopping
the yearly floods of the Tennessee River and making it navigable, an
entire area of almost the size of England, could be opened up for
development. All plans had failed, mainly because Wall Street's big
monopolies didn't want to develop the area.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
was the first President who attacked this problem from a higher
level. He proposed to place the development of the entire region,
which includes portions of seven states, under one single authority,
whose director--the engineer David Lilienthal--reported directly to
the President. FDR's plan foresaw "multi-purpose dams" which
provided flood control, river navigation, and hydroelectricity at
the same time, plus production of fertilizer. In addition, Roosevelt
wanted the electricity to be produced--and sold--at low cost;
thereby undercutting the monopolies--a policy whose efficiency he
had already proven as Governor of New York.
Signalling that this project
was one of the priorities of his New Deal, FDR, with his friend
Senator Norris, the "Father of the TVA," visited the Tennessee area
two months before taking office. After inauguration, things went
very quickly: In April, he sent the TVA bill to Congress, which
passed it in May. This project--a sort of "pilot-project" for the
entire New Deal--became a huge success. Not only did the TVA in a
few years construct 20 multi-purpose dams, erect power plants and
fertilizer factories, produce cheap and abundant electricity, but it
completely--physically--transformed an entire region and its 3
million people: no more floods, a navigable river, malaria wiped
out. The entire area was electrified--both literally and
metaphorically: Farming improved; factories were built; industries
developed; schools, hospitals, libraries were built; wages
increased, the young people of the area remained there, because they
found a place to work or study. The people sensuously felt what
"increasing the standard of living" meant.
In short: Almost overnight,
the "poor-house" of the nation became one of its most productive
areas. And electricity production in the Tennessee Valley didn't
stop with water power: As soon as the possibility of nuclear power
became visible, plans were made to use it to secure the
region's--and nation's--future. America's first "nuclear city" of
Oak Ridge in the Tennessee Valley is one example; the nuclear power
plants built here are another. Roosevelt had regarded the TVA only
as the beginning; he had similar plans for the entire U.S.A.! In
addition, FDR offered the TVA model to other countries all over the
world.
The projects to develop the
"hard" infrastructure of the country were flanked by measures to
improve its "soft" counterpart: important social measures, which for
the first time in U.S. history, established the concept of a minimum
wage, created insurance for the unemployed, sick and old,
established decent health care, and abolished child labor. The
crowning achievement of these measures was the Social Security Act
of 1935, which alone, secured FDR a place in history; as well as his
support for labor. The much contested "Article 7a" gave American
labor the right to organize itself. This law was overturned by the
Supreme Court, so that Roosevelt had to pass it in another form--the
Wagner Act of 1935, the "Bill of Rights" of American labor. (You
see, the U.S. Supreme Court at that time was no better than it is
today!)
`A Rendevous
with Destiny'
To sum it up: With his New
Deal, President Roosevelt demonstrated firstly, that a strong
government working for the common good and promoting the general
welfare, fully exploiting the U.S. Constitution and making
dirigistic interventions based on the principles of the American
System, could stop the Depression--FDR reduced unemployment by over
5 million in his first term--and reconstruct the country by
physically changing its economy. Secondly, that by so doing, he
developed and enlarged his social base, forging a "Harmony of
Interest" among workers, farmers, and entrepreneurs. With that, FDR
got an increasing part of the American people--the
"minorities"--actively engaged in the task of national
reconstruction and nation-building. The huge popular support for the
"Roosevelt coalition" showed itself in the next Presidential
elections, where Roosevelt increased his popular votes from 22.8
million to 27.7 million, winning all states except Vermont and
Maine.
The success of the New Deal
had made it impossible for the international financial oligarchy to
impose fascism on America in the midst of the Depression--as they
unfortunately were able to do, first in Italy, then in Germany, and
also in other countries, including Britain, which just had a less
violent variety, with Ramsay MacDonald's corporatist fascism. Not
that London and Wall Street didn't try in the U.S.--they did try in
1933-34, as was documented in the U.S. Senate, where Gen. Smedley
Butler detailed a fascist plot, financed by the Morgans, to force
Roosevelt to change his policies. But they could not, because FDR
had effectively outflanked them [see footnote 2].
Among the many proofs that
FDR was a conscious proponent of the "American System," is the
speech he gave accepting the nomination as Presidential candidate
for a second time in June 1936. These words, with which I want to
conclude, are as important today as they were then--and by listening
to them, again have in mind the "LaRouchean thorough-bass line."
Attacking Wall Street's
"economic tyranny," which had established "new dynasties," Roosevelt
said:
"They created a new
despotism and wrapped it in the robes of legal sanction. . . .
The economic royalists complain that we seek to overthrow the
institutions of America. What they really complain about is that
we seek to take away their power. Our allegiance to American
institutions requires the overthrow of this kind of power. . . .
The only effective guide for the safety of this most worldly of
worlds, the greatest guide of all, is moral principle. We do not
see faith, hope, and charity as unattainable ideas, but we use
them as the stout supports of a nation fighting for freedom in a
modern civilization."
And especially the way FDR
deals with the concept of charity--you notice, he was quoting Paul's
famous Epistle to the Corinthians--shows how profoundly the mature
Roosevelt understood this fundamental Christian principle, the basis
of any great idea and political action. Said Roosevelt:
"Charity--in the true
spirit of that grand old word. For charity, literally translated
from the original, means love, the love that understands, that
does not merely share the wealth of the giver, but in true
sympathy and wisdom helps men to help themselves. We seek not to
make Government a mechanical implement, but to give it the
vibrant personal character that is the very embodiment of human
charity. We are poor indeed if this Nation cannot afford to lift
from every recess of American life the dread fear of the
unemployed that they are not needed in this world. We cannot
afford to accumulate a deficit in the books of human fortitude."
Concluding his speech, he
said:
"Governments can err,
Presidents can make mistakes, but the immortal Dante tells us,
that Divine justice weighs the sins of the cold-blooded and the
sins of the warm-hearted in different scales. Better the
occasional faults of a government that lives in the spirit of
charity than the consistent omissions of a government frozen in
the ice of its own indifference. There is a mysterious cycle to
human events. To some generations, much is given. Of other
generations, much is expected. This generation of Americans has
a rendezvous with destiny."
And so do we today--all of
us assembled here, together with our many members, supporters, and
sympathizers all over the world--have a rendezvous with mankind's
destiny. A destiny, which is even a bigger one: to make sure, that
the power of LaRouche's ideas, the power of reason, in the immediate
period ahead actually rules not just politics in the U.S., but
civilization worldwide. And this rendezvous, we must not miss.
[1] An unpublished
manuscript by Richard Freeman, based on extensive study of
Roosevelt's papers at the FDR Library in Hyde Park, New York, shows
that FDR identified more strongly with the family lineage of "Isaac
the Patriot," rather than with his anglophile forebears, than has
previously been appreciated.
[2] On the evening
of Feb. 15, 1933, Roosevelt arrived in Miami, just weeks before his
first inauguration. As FDR, speaking from the seat of an open car,
concluded brief remarks, several shots rang out. Five people on or
near the bandstand directly behind the President-elect were hit,
although FDR, miraculously, was not. No competent investigation of
the assassination attempt has ever been carried out. (See L. Wolfe,
"The Morgan-British Fascist Coup Against FDR," New Federalist,
Feb. 4, 1999.)
Article
Reproduced From
Executive Intelligence Review
http://www.larouchepub.com/other/2000/cramer_fdr_2724.html
Pictures added by GLF

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