. . . And even then it was about oil

"Congress is asked to rush through a momentous decision, as if great armies were already on the march. I hear no armies marching. I hear a world crying out for peace".

I wonder how history will eventually judge Henry Wallace. Certainly no household name, Wallace was first Secretary of Agriculture in FDR's first term. During FDR's third term he was Vice-President. He had a dramatic split with Truman in 1946 and ran on the Progressive third party ticket in 1948. Arthur Schlesinger Jr. has an interesting essay on Wallace (linked here) written for the L.A. Times a while back. The address I'm putting up today is from a rally sponsored by The Progressive Citizens of America in March of 1947. At the time a civil war was going on in Greece and tensions were erupting with neighboring Turkey. Iran was in the midst of a civil war. In fact, the whole Middle East region was on the brink of major changes. All of this and the fact that Europe was still struggling to get back on its feet after the war and Russia was emerging as a major world power.
Wallace was a firm believer in the United Nations and was afraid it would go the way the League Of Nations had only a few years earlier. The question of oil as a reason for going to war started coming to light, and it's interesting to see how this particular argument has been played out repeatedly the past 60 or so years.

Wallace has been dismissed as naive, an idealistic relic in a world slipping into Cold War. It's worth wondering if even he could have anticipated the turn of events that took place a few months after this speech was given. Probably more interesting to consider if he had stayed in favor with the Roosevelt administration and continued as vice-President for a fourth term, how the world stage might have changed if he had become President in April of 1945.

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(Henry Wallace with running mate Sen. Glenn H. Taylor in 1948)



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"The American fascist would prefer not to use violence. His method is to poison the channels of public information. With a fascist the problem is never how best to present the truth to the public but how best to use the news to deceive the public into giving the fascist and his group more money or more power."
-- Henry A. Wallace, 1944
The Danger of American Fascism

Long before FOX "news" CNN and Rupert Murdoch, Wallace warned that the channels of public information would be poisoned by fascist forces. His prescience was probably no more than an understanding of history. All imperial powers require a strong instrument of propaganda in the home country.

And, the thing is, it's so ingrained into our society now that a person really has to work very hard to avoid it. It's all around us.

Maybe this is what Crazy Eyes Beck really means when he says "we surround them".

maybe, all the while telling people to surround them. He's a first class stooge. Acting like a man of the people, but defending every corporation like they are the ones being victimized. Poor Exxon, spill just one tanker of oil and everyone hates you. Boo hoo hoo.

It was begun, under the rubric of 'the manufacture of consent,' back in the 1920s, by Freud's favorite nephew, Edouard Bernays, who was hired by Wilson to sell WW I...

...as I was listening to the clip and then reading the first few comments, that's exactly the person I thought of - Edward Bernays...fascinating guy, who used Freud's insights to help corporations (and ultimately the government) to develop ways of "engineering" the thinking of the populous - the birth of modern propaganda.

read about this recently and watched a documentary about it on Google Docs. It was really interesting stuff. I knew a little about the beginning of propaganda during that time, but Bernays really took it to a whole new level.

Condi lying through her bucked teeth http://thinkprogress.org/2009/03/19/rice-911-...

The gap between her front teeth allows the lies to spill out at an alarming rate.

for el Buusho's pencil dick...

I want him to have been our president.

Dammit.

Why is a prophet never known in his own land?

The phrase, said of Cassandra (iirc) was: "A Prophet without honor in her own land."

that is, she was not believed by her own people when she prophesied...

Thank you Gordonskene and SadButTrue for bringing up an American hero I have had yet to learn about. The story of Wallace and his ideas will make for good reading in the next few months. One can only imagine the enormity of a Wallace V.P. in 1944: no Hiroshima or Nagasaki, no cold war disease and its lethal symptoms of the National Security Advisor position and the CIA.

as VP by the Roosevelt Team after visiting the Soviet Union, in early '44.

The "what if?" point about Wallace becoming president in '45 is moot because he lost support for another term as VP and couldn't have stayed on if he'd wished.

...these Newstalgia clips should be listened to by more of the young folks who visit C&L. By doing so, they can begin to understand - for sure - that everything old is new again; nothing really changes. While many believe that what is happening in the world today is novel, if they read and paid attention, they'd understand that history really does repeat, and we, the People get duped every time because of our collective ignorance.

As to the "question of oil," we've been held hostage by the financial elites for more than a century because they control the means by which a finite resource is distributed, as well as the kinds of technologies that have been allowed to come to market (e.g., gas -powered autos). Whenever I consider how we are manipulated by those who control energy and it's use, I can't help but think how different out world might be if Nikolai Tesla had been allowed/enabled to reach his full potential and bring all of his wondrous ideas and inventions to fruition for use by humanity.

...a welcome addition to C&L. Keep up the good work. This guy makes a convincing argument that WW1 was a war for oil. So our penchant for oil wars goes back even more than 60 years. Will we never learn?

...the link didn't work. Here it is:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oX56SSzg6QY

...I guess it did work. Nevermind.

I had to click it twice to link.

I'm reading this all sitting in the Henry A. Wallace Building. When I started, I told my new employers who he was and some of what he had done--they hadn't really known.

Maybe in 60 years, C&L will post the prescient speeches of Ralph Nader.

I bet if C&L were around in '47 it'd be ignoring Wallace and mocking his supporters.

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