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OCR Page 1 of 5EMBASSY OE THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Santiago, Chile -
December 20, 1948
Dear Mr. President:
I have been turning over in my mind your suggestion about
an "analysis of the informational service from which we suffer".
It is a subject on which I have thought for many years. It began
to impress me as a grave danger in the processing of democracy
long before it reached the acute stage where it is today. Both
Jefferson and Lincoln had confidence in the successful operation
of democratic institutions provided -- provided -- the mass of the
people were put in possession of the facts. In the early days we
had a strong partisan press which colored the news to suit partisan
tastes, but everyone knew who owned and directed the papers and
their partisan bias was frankly proclaimed. By getting both sides
fully, the thoughtful could strike a balance and reach the truth.
For many years now the major part of the metropolitan press,
of the press in cities of more than 200,000 people, has been taken
over by one school of political thought, and this is reactionary
or ltra-conservative, and is too often subservient to selfish
private interests whose politics is determined by personal greed.
These are all the more dangerous because of their pose as
"independent". Because of the enormous capital involved in the
ownership of these papers, our people, who are not of the exploit-
ing element and not millionaires, have found it impossible to
possess or to retain possession of them. The result is that all
fundamental issues before the people are presented fifty-two weeks
in the year with a partisan interpretation. In my native State of
Indiana, for example, we have not had a Democratic paper in the
capital for forty years. In my boyhood we had the "Sentinel",
Democratic, and the "Journal", Republican; now these have been
absorbed
Honorable Harry S. Truman,
The White House,
ARCHIVES "NATIONAL RECORDS AND of
SERVICE*
Washington, D. C.
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