| You have heard it said that while we are
succeeding greatly on the fighting front,
we are failing miserably on the home front.
I think this is another of those immaturitiesa
false slogan easy to state but untrue in the
essential facts.
For the longer this war goes on the clearer
it becomes that no one can draw a blue pencil
down the middle of a page and call one side
"the fighting front" and the other
side "the home front." For the
two of them are inexorably tied together.
Every combat division, every naval task
force, every squadron of fighting planes
is dependent for its equipment and ammunition
and fuel and food, as indeed it is for its
manpower, on the American people in civilian
clothes in the offices and in the factories
and on the farms at home.
The same kind of careful planning that
gained victory in North Africa and Sicily
is required, if we are to make victory an
enduring reality and do our share in building
the kind of peaceful world that will justify
the sacrifices made in this war.
The United Nations are substantially agreed
on the general objectives for the postwar
world. They are also agreed that this is
not the time to engage in an international
discussion of all the terms of peace and
all the details of the future. Let us win
the war first. We must not relax our pressure
on the enemy by taking time out to define
every boundary and settle every political
controversy in every part of the world.
The all-important thing now is to get on
with the warand to win it.
While concentrating on military victory,
we are not neglecting the planning of the
things to come, the freedoms which we know
will make for more decency and greater justice
throughout the world.
Among many other things we are, today,
laying plans for the return to civilian
life of our gallant men and women in the
armed services. They must not be demobilized
into an environment of inflation and unemployment,
to a place on a bread line, or on a corner
selling apples. We must, this time, have
plans readyinstead of waiting to do
a hasty, inefficient, and ill-considered
job at the last moment.
I have assured our men in the armed forces
that the American people would not let them
down when the war is won.
I hope that the Congress will help in carrying
out this assurance, for obviously the executive
branch of the Government cannot do it alone.
May the Congress do its duty in this regard.
The American people will insist on fulfilling
this American obligation to the men and
women in the armed forces who are winning
this war for us.
Of course, the returning soldier and sailor
and marine are a part of the problem of
demobilizing the rest of the millions of
Americans who have been working and living
in a war economy since 1941. That larger
objective of reconverting wartime America
to a peacetime basis is one for which your
Government is laying plans to be submitted
to the Congress for action.
But the members of the armed forces have
been compelled to make greater economic
sacrifice and every other kind of sacrifice
than the rest of us, and they are entitled
to definite action to help take care of
their special problems.
The least to which they are entitled, it
seems to me, is something like this:
First, mustering-out pay to every member
of the armed forces and merchant marine
when he or she is honorably discharged;
mustering-out pay large enough in each case
to cover a reasonable period of time between
his discharge and the finding of a new job.
Second, in case no job is found after diligent
search, then unemployment insurance if the
individual registers with the United States
Employment Service.
Third, an opportunity for members of the
armed services to get further education
or trade training at the cost of their Government.
Fourth, allowance of credit to all members
of the armed forces, under unemployment
compensation and Federal old-age and survivors'
insurance, for their period of service.
For these purposes they ought to be treated
as if they had continued their employment
in private industry.
Fifth, improved and liberalized provisions
for hospitalization, for rehabilitation,
for medical care of disabled members of
the armed forces and the merchant marine.
And finally, sufficient pensions for disabled
members of the armed forces.
Your Government is drawing up other serious,
constructive plans for certain immediate
forward moves. They concern food, manpower,
and other domestic problems that tie in
with our armed forces.
Within a few weeks I shall speak with you
again in regard to definite actions to be
taken by the executive branch of the Government,
and specific recommendations for new legislation
by the Congress.
All our calculations for the future, however,
must be based on clear understanding of
the problems involved. And that can be gained
only by straight thinkingnot guesswork,
not political manipulation.
I confess that I myself am sometimes bewildered
by conflicting statements that I see in
the press. One day I read an "authoritative"
statement that we shall win the war this
year, 1943and the next day comes another
statement equally "authoritative,"
that the war will still be going on in 1949.
Of course, both extremesof optimism
and pessimism- are wrong.
The length of the war will depend upon
the uninterrupted continuance of all-out
effort on the fighting fronts and here at
home, and that effort is all one.
The American soldier does not like the
necessity of waging war. And yetif
he lays off for one single instant he may
lose his own life and sacrifice the lives
of his comrades.
By the same token- a worker here at home
may not like the driving, wartime conditions
under which he has to work and live. And
yetif he gets complacent or indifferent
and slacks on his job, he too may sacrifice
the lives of American soldiers and contribute
to the loss of an important battle.
The next time anyone says to you that this
war is "in the bag," or says "it's
all over but the shouting," you should
ask him these questions:
"Are you working full time on your
job?
"Are you growing all the food you can?
"Are you buying your limit of war bonds?
"Are you loyally and cheerfully cooperating
with your Government in preventing inflation
and profiteering, and in making rationing
work with fairness to all?
"Becauseif your answer is 'No'then
the war is going to last a lot longer than
you think."
The plans we made for the knocking out
of Mussolini and his gang have largely succeeded.
But we still have to knock out Hitler and
his gang, and Tojo and his gang. No one
of us pretends that this will be an easy
matter.
We still have to defeat Hitler and Tojo
on their own home grounds. But this will
require a far greater concentration of our
national energy and our ingenuity and our
skill.
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