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My countrymen
and my friends:
Tonight my single duty
is to speak to the whole of America.
Until four-thirty oclock
this morning I had hoped against hope that some
miracle would prevent a devastating war in Europe
and bring to an end the invasion of Poland by
Germany.
For four long years a succession
of actual wars and constant crises have shaken
the entire world and have threatened in each case
to bring on the gigantic conflict which is today
unhappily a fact.
It is right that I should
recall to your minds the consistent and at times
successful efforts of your Government in these
crises to throw the full weight of the United
States into the cause of peace. In spite of spreading
wars I think that we have every right and every
reason to maintain as a national policy the fundamental
moralities, the teachings of religion and the
continuation of efforts to restore peace. Because
some day, though the time may be distant, we can
be of even greater help to a crippled humanity.
It is right, too, to point
out that the unfortunate events of these recent
years have, without question, been based on the
use of force or the threat of force. And it seems
to me clear, even at the outbreak of this great
war, that the influence of America should be consistent
in seeking for humanity a final peace which will
eliminate, as far as it is possible to do so,
the continued use of force between nations.
It is, of course, impossible
to predict the future. I have my constant stream
of information from American representatives and
other sources throughout the world. You, the people
of this country, are receiving news through your
radios and your newspapers at every hour of the
day.
You are, I believe, the
most enlightened and the best informed people
in all the world at this moment. You are subjected
to no censorship of news, and I want to add that
your Government has no information which it withholds
or which it has any thought of withholding from
you.
At the same time, as I
told my press conference on Friday, it is of the
highest importance that the press and the radio
use the utmost caution to discriminate between
actual verified fact on the one hand, and mere
rumor on the other.
I can add to that by saying
that I hope the people of this country will also
discriminate most carefully between news and rumor.
Do not believe of necessity everything you hear
or read. Check up on it first.
You must master at the
outset a simple but unalterable fact in modern
foreign relations between nations. When peace
has been broken anywhere, the peace of all countries
everywhere is in danger.
It is easy for you and
for me to shrug our shoulders and to say that
conflicts taking place thousands of miles from
the continental United States, and, indeed, thousands
of miles from the whole American Hemisphere, do
not seriously affect the Americas-and that all
the United States has to do is to ignore them
and go about its own business. Passionately though
we may desire detachment, we are forced to realize
that every word that comes through the air, every
ship that sails the sea, every battle that is
fought, does affect the American future. Let no
man or woman thoughtlessly or falsely talk of
America sending its armies to European fields.
At this moment there is being prepared a proclamation
of American neutrality. This would have been done
even if there had been no neutrality statute on
the books, for this proclamation is in accordance
with international law and in accordance with
American policy.
This will be followed by
a Proclamation required by the existing Neutrality
Act. And I trust that in the days to come our
neutrality can be made a true neutrality.
It is of the utmost importance
that the people of this country, with the best
information in the world, think things through.
The most dangerous enemies of American peace are
those who, without well-rounded information on
the whole broad subject of the past, the present
and the future, undertake to speak with assumed
authority, to talk in terms of glittering generalities,
to give to the nation assurances or prophesies
which are of little present or future value.
I myself cannot and do
not prophesy the course of events abroad and the
reason is that, because I have of necessity such
a complete picture of what is going on in every
part of the world, I do not dare to do so. And
the other reason is that I think it is honest
for me to be honest with the people of the United
States.
I cannot prophesy the immediate
economic effect of this new war on our nation,
but I do say that no American has the moral right
to profiteer at the expense either of his fellow
citizens or of the men, the women and the children
who are living and dying in the midst of war in
Europe.
Some things we do know.
Most of us in the United States believe in spiritual
values. Most of us, regardless of what church
we belong to, believe in the spirit of the New
Testament, a great teaching which opposes itself
to the use of force, of armed force, of marching
armies and falling bombs. The overwhelming masses
of our people seek peace, peace at home, and the
kind of peace in other lands which will not jeopardize
our peace at home.
We have certain ideas and
certain ideals of national safety, and we must
act to preserve that safety today, and to preserve
the safety of our children in future years.
That safety is and will
be bound up with the safety of the Western Hemisphere
and of the seas adjacent thereto. We seek to keep
war from our own firesides by keeping war from
coming to the Americas. For that we have historic
precedent that goes back to the days of the Administration
of President George Washington. It is serious
enough and tragic enough to every American family
in every State in the Union to live in a world
that is torn by wars on other continents. Those
wars today affect every American home. It is our
national duty to use every effort to keep those
wars out of the Americas.
And at this time let me
make the simple plea that partisanship and selfishness
be adjourned; and that national unity be the thought
that underlies all others.
This nation will remain
a neutral nation, but I cannot ask that every
American remain neutral in thought as well. Even
a neutral has a right to take account of facts.
Even a neutral cannot be asked to close his mind
or his conscience.
I have said not once, but
many times, that I have seen war and that I hate
war. I say that again and again.
I hope the United States
will keep out of this war. I believe that it will.
And I give you assurance and reassurance that
every effort of your Government will be directed
toward that end.
As long as it remains within
my power to prevent, there will be no black-out
of peace in the United States.
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