The Roosevelt MythLudwig von Mises Institute, 1948 - 438 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 4
... Smith had opposed Roosevelt's nomination . It was the hand of God , said some . Cermak had gone to Miami to meet Roosevelt as he arrived from a sea trip aboard Vincent Astor's yacht the Nourmahal a week before the inauguration . Miami ...
... Smith had opposed Roosevelt's nomination . It was the hand of God , said some . Cermak had gone to Miami to meet Roosevelt as he arrived from a sea trip aboard Vincent Astor's yacht the Nourmahal a week before the inauguration . Miami ...
Page 9
... Smith . The stands rose in a great ovation for the Happy Warrior . After this , Mr. Hoover , now rid of his great burden , shook hands with the new President and left at once for Philadelphia and later for his home in California ...
... Smith . The stands rose in a great ovation for the Happy Warrior . After this , Mr. Hoover , now rid of his great burden , shook hands with the new President and left at once for Philadelphia and later for his home in California ...
Page 37
... Smith with a surplus of $ 15,000,000 and left it with a deficit of $ 90,000,000 . He was against Big Government . " We must eliminate the functions of government we must merge , we must con- solidate subdivisions of government and ...
... Smith with a surplus of $ 15,000,000 and left it with a deficit of $ 90,000,000 . He was against Big Government . " We must eliminate the functions of government we must merge , we must con- solidate subdivisions of government and ...
Page 58
... Smith had his say about it all in characteristic language . He called this new trick " baloney dollars " —a name that stuck — and asked why the " Democratic party is always fated to be the party of greenbackers , paper money printers ...
... Smith had his say about it all in characteristic language . He called this new trick " baloney dollars " —a name that stuck — and asked why the " Democratic party is always fated to be the party of greenbackers , paper money printers ...
Page 64
... Smith , a former Shreveport preacher , at its head . The program was simple . No income would exceed a million dollars . Everybody would have a minimum income of $ 2500 . The money would be provided by a capital levy which would remove ...
... Smith , a former Shreveport preacher , at its head . The program was simple . No income would exceed a million dollars . Everybody would have a minimum income of $ 2500 . The money would be provided by a capital levy which would remove ...
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administration agreed Al Smith allies American American Labor Party army asked Atlantic Charter banks became began bill bureau Byrnes cabinet called campaign candidate Churchill Committee Communist conference Congress course Deal Democratic economic election Elliott Elliott Roosevelt Europe Federal Flynn France Frances Perkins Franklin Franklin D Germany governor hands Harry Hopkins Henry Henry Wallace Hillman Hitler Hoover Hull industrial Jim Farley Jimmy knew labor later leaders Lend-Lease McIntire ment million mind Moley Morgenthau Morgenthau Plan never nomination organization party Perkins Poland Polish political President President's problem radio Raskob Raymond Moley Republican Roose Roosevelt Russia Secretary Senator Sidney Hillman Smith speech spending Stalin Stimson story talk Tammany Teheran thing tion told took unions United velt votes Wallace wanted Warm Springs Washington White House wrote York