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James
M. Cox, Democratic Presidential Candidate, 1920 (4:24)
[title]
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If the
file does not automatically play, try clicking
here.
This file is available on CD0200.
This CD contains over 28 hours of historical
audio.
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"The
World War"
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| The
World War has been fought. Historic,
unprecedented. For many many months
civilization hung in the balance.
In the despair of [inaudible] it seemed
as though a world dictator was inevitable,
and that henceforth, men and women
who had lived in freedom would stand
at attention in the face of the drawn
sword of military autocracy. The very
soul of America was touched, as never
before, with the fear that our liberties
might be taken away. What America
did needs no reiteration here. It
is known of all men. History will
acclaim it. Poets will find it an
inspiration throughout the ages. And
yet, there is not a line in the Republican
platform that breathes an emotion
of pride or recites our national achievement.
In fact, if a man from Mars were to
descend upon the Republican platform,
or if spoken interpretation by the
candidate of that party as his first
means of information, he would not
find a syllable telling him that the
war had been won and that America
had saved the world. How ungenerous,
how ingracious all of this is. How
unfair that a mere group of leaders
should so demean themselves in the
name of the party of Lincoln, McKinley
and Roosevelt. The discourtesy to
President Wilson is an affair of political
intrigue. History will make it odious,
as well might it be directed at a
wounded soldier of the war. One fell
in the trench, the trench of the other
was broken the enormous labors of
his great office. But others were
ignored, the men and women who labored
at home within industry and with skill
that words cannot recount. What of
the hands that moved the lathe by
day and the needle by night? What
of the organizations, superbly effective,
that conserved food and fed the world,
that carried nourishment to the very
front trench in the face of hells'
fury, that nursed the wound back to
life, that buried the dead in the
dark shelter of the night, that inspired
businessmen and artisans of all parties
to work in harmony? What of the millions
of men, women and children of all
creeds, religious and otherwise, who
stood in the ranks as firm as soldiers
overseas, undivided by things they
once quarreled about? What of the
government itself, confirming the
faith of our fathers as sufficient
to meet the thorns of time? Why the
smear of labor with the veiled charge
that it was a slacker? Republican
leaders, who have taken charge of
their party and nominated its candidate
are no more possessed of the spirit
of the hour than they were in ninteen
hundred and twelve, when they precipitated
a revolution within the rank and file
of a great organization. If further
proof were needed, the action of the
present congress supplies it. Not
a constructive law can be cited. Money
and time were wasted in seeking to
make a military triumph an odious
chapter in history. Yet, it is significant,
that after two years of truthful inquiry
there was nothing revealed in that
vast enterprise, carrying billions
of dollars in expense, upon which
they could base even a whisper of
dishonesty. |
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