Myths of the New Deal
by John Hinderaker at PowerLine:
“This video by the Center for Freedom and Prosperity does a good job of exploding the key myths that have surrounded the Great Depression and the New Deal for decades. It is remarkable that the facts this video sets forth are starting to become well known, after many years of obfuscation, due to the work of Amity Shlaes and others:
http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2011/12/myths-of-the-new-deal.php“
Comment regarding the emergence of Bimbos at the lecturns of modern America:
Like many folks I would like to learn more about the myths and facts regarding the New Deal of Franklin Roosevelt. I would like to add to my bank of knowledge amassed over these many decades……to add more to my knowledge how to confront Marxist, Barack Hussein Obama and his financiers such as the Marxist, George Soros.
I clicked on the above video. In about ten seconds I could proceed no further. I began to view the human subject rather than thoughts about the words which were supposed to give her voice value. Her voice suggested she was ill.
I realized, however I began to see nothing but Bimbo……as in Bimbo presented by Fox News on cable tv. I preferred the info regarding FDR not the sounds suggesting waving legs, short skirts, and waxed hair with or without pierced noses.
”It’s not what she wears. It’s what’s in the head that counts”, my mother used to warn me. ”Stay away from the others”.
Try the following exercise:
Turn away from the screen and listen ONLY TO THE SOUND. Learning how to become a Bimbo is part of the American curriculum and begins in elementary school culminating in the production we see here in this John Hinderaker presentation.
Ms. Bimbo’s message may be worth while to hear. But how can one endure such a repulsive series of harsh, rasping tones which tell it? If her face were sandpaper, would you follow the video? Where did she learn such ugly, abrasive sounds? Do you think she might grow up some day and develop a mature female condition, both visual and aural?
Likely not without training. Compare her tramp sounds with the voices of grown women of the 1930s and 1940s……Try Betty Davis or Katherine Hepburn for starters. Do you notice a difference between the yesterday and today here?
The star at the lecturn is a modern American child, a product of Americana university in today’s body and spirit…….repelling despite the importance of her story.
Filed under: American Culture, Education, National Politics