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OCR Page 1 of 2I
DI IS RELATE
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
REAR PLATFORM REMARKS OF THE
PRESIDENT AT ROME, NEW YORK
"NATIONAL
October 8, 1948 - 12:43 P.M., , E.S.T.
RECORDS
Thank you very much. Thank you very much.
I was discussing where we were awhile ago in this great
State of New York and somebody said we would be in Rome in
20 minutes, and I said, "That's mighty quick -- to be in
Rome in 20 minutes." And he said, "Oh, I mean Rome, New
York." But I want to say to you that we are living in an
age where that would not be beyond the bounds of possibility
for the simple reason that we have gone forward at a terrific
rate in the last decade, and in the last 30 years so much
that you cannot recognize the same country when you 80
into it.
I was out in Iowa at the beginning of this tour
I have been taking around the United States, and they
were having a plowin contest, and there were 100 thousand
farmers at that meeting. And I asked them if there was
any possibility of my having a chance to drive a four-
mule team to two-gang plow, and they said, "No, that's
obsolete. You're living in a past age. We have no mules
on the place. You'll have to go to Missouri to get one."
I said, "All right, I'm not one to turn the clock back."
I wouldn't attempt to do that because when we try to turn
the clock back we never profit by that procedure.
And from 1933 until the present day we have been
turning the clock forward. We have been doing things for
the welfare of the people as a whole. We gave labor a
Bill of Rights. We gave the farmer a farm program which
has made him more prosperous than he has ever been in
his history. We so arranged things that the distribution
of the income of this country is on a fair basis for
everybody. Now, I want to keep that condition going
forward.
But in 1946 a great many of the voters of this great
country, and one-third of the people entitled to vote, elected
a Congress that wants to turn the clock back. The first
thing that 80th Congress did when it got in was to try to
put a hallter on labor. They wanted to repeal labor's Bill
of Rights, the Fair Labor Standards Act -- or the Wagner
Act, as it is commonly known. The first thing they did was
to pass the Teft-Hartley Act just as quickly as they could
get to it, and they said they passed it SD as to put labor
in its place. Now, I think labor is in its place when
labor is prosperous, along with industry and along with the
farmers.
There were only 3 million people in labor organizations
in 1932. There are about 16 million in those organizations
now and they are getting about three times the pay they did
in that day. The farmer is getting more income this year
than he ever got in his history. They only received about
four and one-half billion in 1932. Last year they had 18
billions -- and they weren't expecting to be sold out every
minute either.
You know, there were , 123 thousand farmers taken
off their farms in 1932. There were less than 800 in
last year. The farm debt has been reduced. Labor is in a
better condition than it has ever been in the history of the
country. There are 61 million people at work in this
country. Nearly anybody who wants a job can get one in
this day and age. There were some 12 or 15 million people
walking the streets back in 1932, wondering where the
next bread-crumb was going to come from, that they could
live on.
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