Yet another great example of how this liar misleads by distorting quotes. Check out her link to The Free Dictionary definition of concentration camp. Why do you suppose she cherry picked one small portion of the definition supplied by Free Dictionary? Check out her link and see for yourself how she manipulates her links to misrepresent fact and truth.
what I have noticed about her trolling in her obsession over FDR which is really scary,is how she always blatantly ignores how the republicans are as corrupt as well NEVER mentioning the pic I have posted a few times in the past of Eisenhower standing next to stalin while he has his soliders murder children. has she EVER once talked about any other president here before other than FDR? I sure as hell cant remember it if she ever did.
Fascist and corporatist hate FDR. He proved beyond any doubt that New Deal policies could and did work. His policies end up being the most anti corporatist and anti fascist implemented in the 20th Century. Hate FDR or love him, his impact has had positive effects on the American way of life and his policies continue to be mimicked and to influence policies though every administration since his death as a sitting President in his fourth term in office. The impact of other Presidents pale in comparison to the impacts and legacy of FDR.
Liar.
1. Fascists like Mussolini loved and supported Roosevelt.
- Mussolini wrote a book review of Roosevelt’s “Looking Forward,” in which he said “…[as] Roosevelt here calls his readers to battle, is reminiscent of the ways and means by which Fascism awakened the Italian people.” Popolo d’Italia, July 7, 1933.
- In 1934, Mussolini wrote a review of “New Frontiers,” by FDR’s Sec’y of Agriculture, later Vice-President, Henry Wallace: “Wallace’s answer to what America wants is as follows: anything but a return tyo the free-market, i.e., anarchistic economy. Where is America headed? This book leaves no doubt that it is on the road to corporatism, the economic system of the current century.” Marco Sedda, Il politico, vol. 64, p. 263.
- “The similarities of the economics of the New Deal to the economics of Mussolini’s corporative state or Hitler’s totalitarian state are both close and obvious.” Norman Thomas, head of the American Socialist Party.
1. The Fascism of the 30’s was hardly new on the scene. In fact, by the 1920’s, American intellectuals, disappointed in what they perceived as the failures of classical liberalism allowed themselves to think that Fascism was the path toward their ideals, and the same path allowed them to stumble into Stalinism some time later. The jewels of the new thinking, according to these elites, was comprehensive state control, planning and direction, as long as the goals remained “a conscious, intelligent ordering of society,” as Columbia professor and disciple of John Dewey, Herbert W. Schneider stated.
a. American progressives, pragmatists, viewed Fascism’s emphasis on political repression as a regrettable but entirely understandable corollary.
From Schivelbusch, chapter one.