Speech Delivered by Senator Harry S. Truman to the Roosevelt Women's Democratic Club, Springfield, Missouri
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OCR Page 1 of 3Delivered by U. S. Senator Harry S. Truman at Springfield,
Missouri, , May 7, 1940, before the Roosevelt Women's
Democratic Club.
My good friends and members of the Roosevelt Women's Democratic
Club of Springfield:-
It is a very great pleasure for me to be with you today.
It
gives me an opportunity to tallk a little politics - to discuss current
issues. The campaign will soon be on in earnest. We already hear the
Anti New Dealers rolling out their slightly moldy chestnuts. The attack
for 1940 will be the same streamlined Anti Roosevelt hymn of hate.
We already hear the slogan of a "return to free enterprise".
The keynote has been sounded both by the so called Conservative
Democrats and the Republicans. They tell us that history shows that
civilization and prosperity progress as government authority is
restrained. That human liberty flourishes as the activities of the
government are curtailed. We hear much of such talk as the time for
the National Convention approaches.
Let's look back at the Golden Age of "free enterprise" of some
ten years ago. Let's look at that great age of Harding, Coolidge and
the Great Engineer, Mr. Hoover.
It is quite true that in the age which gives these gentlemen
such nostalgic pains "free enterprise" bloomed a.s the green bay tree,
government was exceedingly "restrained" and certain "liberties"
flourished. Wonder if we may not list a few of those "liberties":-
The liberty of business to go hog wild, to inflate sales, to
exploit labor and the liberty to go broke and let the country take
the consequences.
The liberty to exploit the farmers and the producers; the liberty
to create a Hawley-Smoot Tariff and ruin our foreign trade.
The liberty of brokers and so called investors to turn Wall Street
into 3, Monte Carlo, to take abysmal plunges and high fliers, to engage
in highly questionable practices and skulduggery. The liberty
to
pyramid paper profits as high as Al Smith's Empire State Building,
and ther to have them go smash in the greatest panic of all time which
gave the victims an opportunity to sell apples and shoe strings
or
to
jump off the same Empire State Building.
Then there was the liberty to put your money and your hard earned
wages into the banks without limit and without guarantee, and the same
liberty for the banks to shut their doors in your face and call the
police to keep you from getting your own money.
There was the liberty to grow old without hope except the county
farm and the constitutional privilege and freedom to starve or beg or
live on relatives if there were no poor houses.
TAUMAN
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