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Much has
been said of late about good Americanism.
It is right that it should have
been said. And it is right that
every chance should be seized to
repeat the basic truths underlying
our prosperity and our national
existence itself. But it would be
an unusual and much to be wished-for
thing, if in the coming presentation
of the issue a new note of fairness
and generosity could be struck.
Littleness,
meanness, falsehood, extreme partisanship:
these are not in accord with the
American spirit. I like to think
that in this respect also we are
moving forward. Let me be concrete.
We have passed through a great war.
An armed conflict which called forth
every resource, every effort, on
the part of the whole population.
The war was won by Republicans as
well as by Democrats. Men of all
parties served in our armed forces.
Men and women of all parties served
the government at home. They strived
honestly, as Americans, not as mere
partisans. Republicans and Democrats
alike worked in administrative positions,
raised Liberty Loans, administered
food control, toiled in munitions
plants, built ships. The war was
brought to a successful conclusion
by a glorious common effort -- one
which in the years to come will
be a national pride.
I feel very
certain that our children will come
to regard our participation as memorable
for the broad honor and honesty
which marked it; for the absence
of unfortunate scandal and for the
splendid unity of action which extended
to every portion of the nation.
It would therefore not only serve
little purpose, but would conform
ill to our high standards, if any
person should, in the heat of political
rivalry, seek to manufacture political
advantage out of a nationally conducted
trouble.
We have seen
things on too large a scale to listen
at this date to trifles, or to believe
in the adequacy of trifling men.
It is that same vision of the higher
outlook of national and individual
life which will, I am sure, lead
us to demand that the men who represent
us in the affairs of government
shall be more than politicians;
that they shall subordinate always
the individual ambitions and the
party advantage to the national
good. In the long run, the
true statements and the honestly
forward-looking party will prevail.
Even if a
nation entered the war for an ideal,
so it has emerged from the war with
the determination that this ideal
shall not die. It is idle to pretend
that the declaration of war of April
6, 1917 was a mere act of self-defense,
or that the object of our participation
was solely to defeat the military
power of the central nations of
Europe. We knew then as a nation,
even as we know today, that success
on land and sea could be but half
a victory. The other half is not
won yet. The cry of the French at
Verdun, "They shall not pass"
and the cheer of our own men in
the Argonne, "We shall go through,"
these were essential glories, yet
they are incomplete. To them we
must write the binding finish --
it shall not occur again -- for
America demands that the crime of
war shall cease.
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