Word: lindberghism
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...England Cannot Win." At the Lindbergh rally was Lawrence Dennis, No. 1 intellectual Fascist in the U.S. Novelist Kathleen Norris, Oldster Jafsie Condon, go-between in the Lindbergh kidnapping case, huge, lumbering Senator David Ignatius Walsh of Massachusetts, and Journalist John T. Flynn, foe of the New Deal and intervention, sat on the platform. There also sat Anne Lindbergh, author of "The Wave of the Future." "Phooey on England!" screamed a woman in the crowd dominated by New York Irish and other anti-British partisans...
...Lindbergh, still thin and young-looking, his wavy hair now receding a little, spoke calmly, almost cold-bloodedly, and with evident sincerity. He asserted that...
Struggle of Opinion. Implicit in Colonel Lindbergh's speech was the acknowledgment that the U.S. at large has already taken sides in the war. His plea was that to fight the war would be a great mistake because Hitler was bound to win. It was basically a plea against fighting as a matter, not of moral or political, but of military opinion...
...showed that they are strongly behind his foreign policy. Giving full or qualified approval were 71.9%, with only 17% disapproving. Verdicts on the foreign pol icy of other prominent Americans: Wendell Willkie (who has supported the President on this issue), 81.9% in favor, 11.6% opposed, rest noncommittal; Isolationist Charles Lindbergh, 31.4% in favor, 55.4% opposed; Isolationist Senator Burt Wheeler, 26.6% in favor, 55.4% opposed...
Maintaining that the utterances of a Reserve Army Officer should be appropriate to his rank and position at a time of national emergency, Edward K. Rand, professor of Latin, supported President Roosevelt's action in criticizing the speeches of Colonel Lindbergh in a letter to the Boston Globe...