Monday, July 4, 2022

On the Fourth

Today would be a good day to watch Don’t Be a Sucker, a short 1943 film from the U.S. Department of War. Context at Wikipedia. Complete cast at IMDb.

Here’s an excerpt. A soapbox speaker is addressing a small crowd, presenting himself an “American American,” or what Tucker Carlson would call a “legacy American.” The speaker rails against “Negroes,” Catholics, Masons, and “alien foreigners.” A Hungarian-born professor (Paul Lukas) listens with dismay: “I’ve heard this kind of talk before, but I never expected to hear it in America.” When the speaker is done, the professor talks at length to another spectator who thought the speaker made “pretty good sense,” at least until he mentioned the Masons:

“We must never let ourselves be divided by race, or color, or religion, because in this country we all belong to minority groups. I was born in Hungary; you are a Mason: these are minorities. And then you belong to other minority groups too. You are a farmer; you have blue eyes; you go to the Methodist church. Your right to belong to these minorities is a precious thing. You have a right to be what you are and say what you think, because here we have personal freedom. We have liberty.

“And these are not just fancy words. This is a practical and priceless way of living. But we must work at it. We must guard everyone's liberty, or we can lose our own. If we allow any minority to lose its freedom by persecution, or by prejudice, we are threatening our own freedom. And this is not simply an idea: this is good hard common sense.

“You see, here in America it is not a question of whether we tolerate minorites. America is minorities. And that means you and me. So let’s not be suckers. We must not allow the freedom or dignity of any man to be threatened by any act or word. Let’s be selfish about it. Let’s forget about we and they. Let’s think about us.”
Everything old is new again. Including this post: it’s more or less a post I made in May. But I wanted to share it again today.

comments: 2

Anonymous said...

I watched it about six months ago and had very similar thoughts. Yesterday I watched Destination Tokyo and was taken back by a short exchange decrying the use of women only “for work or to have children.” “They’ve been sold a swindle and they accept it,” another character said, noting the lack of unions.
-AC

Michael Leddy said...

So disturbing the way those scenes become contemporary again. I think too of the scene in The Best Years of Our Lives with the man at the soda fountain who says we fought the wrong people. He has an American-flag lapel pin of course.