Roosevelt understood it: Don’t lose control of the debate

When Franklin D. Roosevelt wanted to spend $50 billion ($700 billion in today’s dollars) to help the nations fighting Hitler while his country was still not at war, he made certain he, and not his political enemies, controlled the message, something the Obama administration has neglected to do in the health-care battle.

The Roosevelt message was highly controversial. It would take those billions from a Depression-weary nation, send the money overseas and in so doing, take sides in a war most Americans wanted to avoid at all costs. Opposition was fierce. The White House was flooded with mail from wives and mothers imploring the president not to sacrifice their husbands and sons in a foreign war, but the alternative was to do nothing while Nazi Germany overran all of Europe.

Roosevelt called the bill that would save Great Britain and the Soviet Union “Lend Lease,†the message being that the guns, ships and planes sent to them would be loaned or rented. His Democratic majority in the House of Representatives patriotically labeled the bill House Resolution 1776, “An Act to Further Promote the Defense of the United States,†and not the nations getting the aid, because the defense of the United States was the ultimate goal.

    u    u    u

Then, to make things perfectly clear, Roosevelt went on the radio and explained the bill in words every citizen could understand:

“Well, let me give you an illustration,†he said to the people he called “my friends,†gathered around their Philcos and Atwater Kents. “Suppose my neighbor’s house catches fire, and I have a length of garden hose. I don’t say, ‘Neighbor, my hose cost me $15, you have to pay me $15 for it.’ I don’t want $15, I want my garden hose back after the fire is over.â€

“I believe it may accurately be said that with that neighborly analogy, Roosevelt won the fight for Lend Lease,†Robert E. Sherwood wrote in his Pulitzer Prize-winning history, “Roosevelt and Hopkins.â€

“There were to be two months of some of the bitterest debates in American history, but through it all the American people as a whole maintained the conviction that there couldn’t be anything radical or very dangerous in the president’s proposal to lend our garden hose to the British who were fighting so heroically against such fearful odds. There were probably very few who had any expectation we would ever get the hose back.â€

The opposition faded and Lend Lease passed the Senate by a vote of 60-31 and the House, 317-17.

    u    u    u

President Obama could have used some of that straight, garden hose kind of talk in winning the support of the American people on health-care reform, but unlike Roosevelt, he has allowed the opposition to control the debate. While the administration and its friends in Congress talk about public options and single payers and are vague and unconvincing about how health-care reform will be financed, the opposition keeps it simple by screaming about big government control, socialized medicine, health-care rationing and death panels.

One could see Roosevelt calling the public option “Medicare for Everyone,†which is essentially what it is. He might have used one of his Fireside Chats to tell a story or two about insurance companies that keep patients from receiving the care they need until they die. He’d remind you that you’d want your less fortunate neighbor to receive health care as good as yours if he’s sick.

    u    u    u

Another Roosevelt example for our times: Near the end of World War II and the end of his life, Roosevelt pushed through one last piece of New Deal legislation, the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944, which, to enhance its appeal, was nicknamed the GI Bill of Rights. It was a name that even the most fervent opponent of helping those who won the war adjust to civilian life had trouble criticizing.

The GI Bill is remembered today for sending millions of veterans to college, but its most contentious provision gave $20 a week for 52 weeks in unemployment compensation for jobless veterans. This horrified the Right, who saw the government destroying the rugged individualism of these young survivors of the worst war in the history of the world. But only a few veterans took part in the so-called 52/20 Clubs; many more would become the first members of their families to attend college.

Before the GI Bill expired in 1956, the government educated 7.8 million veterans. The bill also provided low-interest mortgages that put more Americans — eventually 2.4 million — in homes of their own than at any time in history.

Some of those angry men and women waving anti-Obama placards today probably still live in the homes their government-educated fathers or grandfathers bought with a no money down, 1-percent government mortgage in the late 1940s and ’50s.

Dick Ahles is a retired journalist from Simsbury. E-mail him at dahles@hotmail.com.

Latest News

Living art takes center stage in the Berkshires

Contemporary chamber musicians, HUB, performing at The Clark.

D.H. Callahan

Northwestern Massachusetts may sometimes feel remote, but last weekend it felt like the center of the contemporary art world.

Within 15 miles of each other, MASS MoCA in North Adams and the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown showcased not only their renowned historic collections, but an impressive range of living artists pushing boundaries in technology, identity and sound.

Keep ReadingShow less
Persistently amplifying women’s voices

Francesca Donner, founder and editor of The Persistent. Subscribe at thepersistent.com.

Aly Morrissey

Francesca Donner pours a cup of tea in the cozy library of Troutbeck’s Manor House in Amenia, likely a habit she picked up during her formative years in the United Kingdom. Flanked by old books and a roaring fire, Donner feels at home in the quiet room, where she spends much of her time working as founder, editor and CEO of The Persistent, a journalism platform created to amplify women’s voices.

Although her parents are American and she spent her earliest years in New York City and Litchfield County — even attending Washington Montessori School as a preschooler — Donner moved to England at around five years old and completed most of her education there. Her accent still bears the imprint of what she describes as a traditional English schooling.

Keep ReadingShow less
Jarrett Porter on the enduring power of Schubert’s ‘Winterreise’
Baritone Jarrett Porter to perform Schubert’s “Winterreise”
Tim Gersten

On March 7, Berkshire Opera Festival will bring “Winterreise” to Studio E at Tanglewood’s Linde Center for Music and Learning, with baritone Jarrett Porter and BOF Artistic Director and pianist Brian Garman performing Franz Schubert’s haunting 24-song setting of poems by Wilhelm Müller.

A rejected lover. A frozen landscape. A mind unraveling in real time. Nearly 200 years after its premiere, “Winterreise” remains unnervingly current in its psychological portrait of isolation, heartbreak and existential drift.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

A grand finale for Crescendo’s 22nd season

Christine Gevert, artistic director, brings together international and local musicians for a season of rare works.

Stephen Potter

Crescendo, the Lakeville-based nonprofit specializing in early and rarely performed classical music, will close its 22nd season with a slate of spring concerts featuring international performers, local musicians and works by pioneering composers from the Baroque era to the 20th century.

Christine Gevert, the organization’s artistic director, has gathered international vocal and instrumental talent, blending it with local voices to provide Berkshire audiences with rare musical treats.

Keep ReadingShow less

Leopold Week honors land and legacy

Leopold Week honors land and legacy

Aldo Leopold in 1942, seated at his desk examining a gray partridge specimen.

Robert C. Oetking

In his 1949 seminal work, “A Sand County Almanac,” Aldo Leopold, regarded by many conservationists as the father of wildlife ecology and modern conservation, wrote, “There are some who can live without wild things and some who cannot.” Leopold was a forester, philosopher, conservationist, educator, writer and outdoor enthusiast.

Originally published by Oxford University Press, “A Sand County Almanac” has sold 2 million copies and been translated into 15 languages. On Sunday, March 8, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Great Hall of the Norfolk Library, the public is invited to a community reading of selections from the book followed by a moderated discussion with Steve Dunsky, director of “Green Fire,” an Emmy Award-winning documentary film exploring the origins of Leopold’s “land ethic.” Similar reading events take place each year across the country during “Leopold Week” in early March. Planning for this Litchfield County reading began when the Norfolk Library received a grant from the Aldo Leopold Foundation, which provided copies of “A Sand County Almanac” to distribute during the event.

Keep ReadingShow less
Millbrook dance party draws nearly 80 to Village Hall

Impressive dance moves were displayed by Village Trustee Shannon Mawson who added a visual flair of fabric in motion at Club Friendly, a community dance at Village Hall on Friday, Feb. 27.

Leila Hawken

Nearly 80 residents filled Village Hall on Friday, Feb. 27, for a two-hour community dance party organizers hope will become a recurring event.

The gathering, dubbed “Club Friendly,” transformed Village Hall into a lively dance space with colorful décor, upbeat lighting and a steady mix of tracks spun by local DJ Christopher James. Serving as emcee, James kept the energy high and encouraged dancers of all ages to take to the floor.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.