The David Knight Show - FDR: The Original Deep State Dictator
Episode Date: October 8, 2025Historian David Beito discusses his new book “FDR: A New Political Life” and exposes how FDR’s New Deal laid the foundations for America’s surveillance state, media censorship, and executive d...ictatorship. From telegram spying and gold confiscation to secret war plans and Supreme Court power grabs, this interview reveals how Roosevelt redefined tyranny in democratic disguise—and how today’s leaders are repeating his playbook. Follow the show on Kick and watch live every weekday 9:00am EST – 12:00pm EST https://kick.com/davidknightshow Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to https://davidknight.gold/ for great deals on physical gold/silverFor 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to https://trendsjournal.com/ and enter the code KNIGHTFind out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.com If you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome back, and I want to begin with a couple of statements from people that about this book.
The book is FDR, A New Political Life.
The author is David Beto.
And this is the first one that's here is from Hillsdale College.
It's Burton Folsom.
He says the book, FDR, A New Political Life, is the most illuminating one-volume history of FDR.
ever written. American historians have come to recognize that Roosevelt's New Deal did not end the
Great Depression, but prolonged it. David Beto carefully explains why so many FDR programs and
power grabs were so counterproductive. To go from the older FDR histories to David Bado's
wonderful new work is to make a historic leak from the dark ages. Also, another author, David
McCallis, says when it comes to race and Western influence,
FDR's vision of the world order was muddled by delusional phenomena.
He was not a man of empire or genocide like his wartime allies, Churchill and Stalin,
but he was a dreadfully old-fashioned Victorian quack,
an amateur phrenologist who believed that repopulating the Pacific Rim
with certain choice cross-breeding would create a better world for all.
David Beto takes us further than his predecessors along the breadcrumb path
into Franklin Roosevelt's thick forested interior.
And, again, many wonderful stellar reviews.
And I've got to say, even though I wasn't able to read the entire book, what I read of it really does match with this.
I'll give you one more.
This is from Jim Bovart, who we've interviewed on this show many times.
He said historian David Beto, who previously exposed how President Franklin Roosevelt ravaged Americans' constitutional rights,
is back with a new book, vividly exposing his personal perfidy from the dawn of Woodrow,
Wilson administration to 1945, the betrayal at Yalta and beyond. With volleys of research,
Beto demolishes Roosevelt's reputation as one of the quote-unquote great presidents. And so I look at
FDR, like Lincoln, these are presidents who come in at a time of great societal upheaval and
change and war, and they have an active role in redefining our society. I think we're in a time
like that right now. This is a guy who ran as a peace candidate.
but then turned to war.
He was there at the center of the fight between gold and fiat currency.
He was presided over rapid expansion of a Leviathan federal government
with very creative excuses to override the Constitution.
He instituted surveillance, and there was a free speech revolt against him.
He also weaponized the FCC, and we can see, you know,
we've talked about what was going on with the FCC.
We pointed out that why should,
broadcast media have its content controlled when they don't control the press.
Well, you can look to FDR for that.
So joining us now is David Beto.
Thank you so much for joining us.
It's an excellent book here that you have.
Thank you so much.
You know, it's interesting you brought up the, I mean, if you don't mind, the FCC issue.
And it brought to mind the contrast between FDR and Trump.
You know, Trump makes these wild threats about involving the FCC.
He goes public with it.
He tries to get Jimmy Kimmel
off the air, which really wasn't worth the effort,
frankly. And
he succeeds short
term, but now Kimball is back on the
air. So Trump looks silly.
What FDR did is he
did it behind the scenes. He did it
carefully. He would never make a public
statement like that. He went to the
sponsors of, for
example, there was a leading
anti-New Deal radio commentator
called, named Boke Harder in 1938, one of the top-rated commentators in the country on CBS.
And so how did Roosevelt get him off the air?
He did open an IRS investigation, an immigration investigation, because Carter was from Canada.
And then finally, he went to the executives, or he went to the sponsors, including Marjorie
Maryweather Post, who sold, well, at least she was the original owner of Marilago.
And she used her influence, and Carter was forced off the air.
And by the end of 1938, all anti-New Deal commentators on the main networks were off the air.
And despite the fact that most newspapers were hostile to FDR, he did it all quietly.
He did it all behind the scenes with a scalpel where, you know, Trump used the blunt edge of the sword.
And in many ways, we should be thankful for that.
Yeah.
That Trump is like a bull in a China shop so often.
And sometimes when he doesn't need to get his way, he doesn't get his way because he's so, I don't know, obvious about it.
Yeah, maybe his real thing is more about getting Americans divided and fighting each other than it is about the actual reform.
But what FDR did is something that we've seen a pattern of people in government typically doing, and that is working behind the scenes quietly.
sending out messages to make sure that this group or that group is shadow banned or canceled.
And you can use your own judgment in terms of doing this because you're a private corporation
and you can do that.
But of course, he kind of did that with in terms of telegrams and things like that before,
not the social media side, of course, but actual physical telegrams.
FDR had his involvement with that as well.
And they see the early trends of the surveillance state.
The technology has changed, but the nature of men and power hasn't really changed that much.
Talk a little bit about the Black Inquisition and things that were involved in that.
Okay.
Well, the Black Committee was a Senate committee.
He was headed by Senator Hugo Black, who later ended up on the U.S. Supreme Court, despite his clan background.
And Black was an attack dog for the New Deal.
He was really Roosevelt's main ally, I would say, in the Congress.
He was the to-go-to guy.
Well, Roosevelt wanted an investigation of anti-New Deal organizations, and Black was more than happy to cooperate in this.
So, Black would call these witnesses, and they would, you know, sometimes successfully hold him off.
He would bring in leading anti-New Deal figures.
And so Black got the bright idea, or someone got the bright idea, well, why don't I get their private telegrams?
Telegrams were the e-mails texts of the time.
They were over half of long-distance communication.
People would say things in telegrams that they wouldn't say in letters, but they would say now in an email or a text.
And there were thousands of them.
They were instantaneous, virtually instantaneous.
So Black goes to Western Union and the other telegram.
telegraph companies and said, I want copies of all telegrams sent to and from members of Congress
and he had other people as well for like a six months period. And Western Union's response
was, are you kidding? You know, our customers would hate that. And Black goes to the FCC,
gets approval. And of course, FDR would have had a hand in this. Although, again, he
He didn't really have to order Black to do anything because Black was serving the New Deal and got FCC approval.
So, again, it's FCC because-
The telegraph companies were ordered to provide that was one example, all, it's, you know, millions of telegrams.
But then they expanded, Black expanded the investigation to include other cities, targeted individuals, and so forth.
So he went in there with his staffers into Western Union, and they had to keep copies of, of the
of telegrams, right?
That was sort of part of their
requirement. And they got
big bonds for all of the
telegrams, the staffers went through them.
Sorry, that was a government requirement to keep
the copies in the first place? Yes.
Okay. Well, I think the telegraph
companies probably maybe would have kept their
own copies anyway. I don't know. But they
were required to keep copies
of all telegrams. And they went
through millions. And I couldn't believe
this when I saw. But yes,
that was true. They went through about 10,
thousand a day over a very long period of time, and the committee staffers had instructions to
don't look at anything of a personal nature. Just look at material related to lobbying.
What would be lobbying? Well, the committee had a specific definition. Indirect or direct
lobbying, indirect lobbying would be any attempt to influence public opinion. So our conversation
would be an example of that.
So any attempt to influence public opinion
would be considered lobbying.
So they went through, copied selectively,
and then ambushed witnesses,
because this was all secret.
None of the witnesses knew they were doing this.
None of them knew.
And eventually came out because Western Union
informed, started to inform people who were being targeted.
And one of them sued,
very prominent law firm in Chicago still there
Silas Strawn was his name
and Strawn was a heavyweight
and in one in federal district court
by that time Black had done his damage
and he said well we're done with our investigation
however this was a very good precedent
for the future
now of course Black could use the telegrams
that he'd gotten his illegal booty
but he couldn't do any more of this kind of
nor could official future congressional committees.
Very important precedent, but it's not very well known, but it's a federal court judge.
Yeah, we usually think about, you know, what's going on with FISA and everything.
And, you know, that came after World War II because with the creation of the CIA and NSA,
they started getting information from the phone company, getting pin information.
Who did they call and that type of thing, which they could infer a lot from.
but actually this predates all of that
were they using this as you said
they were questioning people
did they use this information as a perjury trap for people
you know ask them a question that I knew the answer to
I suspect that that kind of thing went on
I haven't come across it
I have reason to believe from just reading
some of Roosevelt's comments that he was
you know this information was shared with him
but I can't prove it.
But I think it was used for all sorts of nefarious reasons.
See, historians have kind of looked in the wrong place.
They've looked at people like Jagger Hoover, who, again, there's a lot of things he did too.
But the mass surveillance, this is a better example of mass surveillance, but people haven't looked at it.
In fact, I hadn't even heard of the Black Committee until about 12 years ago when I was doing research and I came
crossed it. I said, what's this thing, the black committee? What's that? Is that describing the
nature of the committee? Yeah. No, it was a Senate committee. It was forgotten. Not by a lot of
conservatives, though. Conservatives would be bringing up in the 1950s, and that's part of the
reason why McCarthyism came about, because they were pissed. And they thought, well, you guys are
now complaining about civil liberties. What about the black committee? And that's a parallel to today as well,
isn't it? You know, when you're suffering injustice like that, you feel entitled to propagate
it against your enemies again. You know, so, wait, you guys did it to us. So what about that? Let's do
it again. I love the title that you've got here. Probably Trump's going to do sedition trials,
I would guess, right? That's right. The same thing the J6 people were convicted of.
The stupid law that should have been repealed. Exactly. Or at least severely limited.
I like the way that you've got it here in the, in your book, the Black Inquisition.
You know, that really does get your attention as you're looking at it.
It's like, it was like, oh, okay, you go.
Yeah, the Black Inquisition.
And then there was a pushback against that.
Part of it was William Randolph Hurst was, of course, targeted that because I guess I
could say, well, anything that he says is going to be influencing public opinion, obviously.
So let's get all of his telegrams.
And so he actually, you have a chapter here, the right and the left free speech coalition.
So there's a pushback with that.
He joined with the ACLU left.
as William Randolph Hearst pushing back on us.
Tell us a little bit about that.
Yeah.
Well, the Black Committee had gotten a treasure trove of Hearst-related telegrams.
But they did a very stupid thing.
They did a public subpoena.
None of this was subpoenaed, by the way.
But they did a public subpoena of one and only one telegram that they probably already had.
And this telegram was where Hearst was accusing this prompt.
member of Congress, a committee chair, of being in league with the communists. It was kind of a hyperpolic
telegram. And I guess what the Black Committee, what Black thought was, people just see that as so
over the top, this will be good PR for us. But instead, what happened is other members of Congress,
like, you know, a guy named McCormack, who is future speaker of the house, a guy named Emmanuel
Seller. These are new dealers.
They say this is uncalled for.
This is the tactics of Mussolini.
So it actually backfired on Roosevelt.
Even many of his own New Deal supporters were against this.
And this is very interesting and very discouraging in some ways because during this period,
you had a lot of civil libertarians on the left, who were willing, even though they liked Roosevelt,
who were willing to push back against him.
And that is not as true today.
Maybe that will change now,
but it's not,
it certainly hasn't been true today.
Well, today we're so much more partisan and tribal,
and we don't seem to care about principles.
We don't seem to care about the rule of law.
And that's true of both sides, isn't it?
Well, you had some people at the time give you a sense of the difference.
H.L. Mencken was an in-your-face kind of anti-new dealer,
civil libertarian you know I don't know agnostic he only needed everybody but he was friends with
everybody he had correspondence that span the political spectrum he was respected he was liked as an
individual could talk to people I don't think there is many people who can who fit in that category
today that's right yeah he was a real clever wit I mentioned frequently his thing a year ago
if I had a gold coin and a flask of whiskey the whiskey was illegal and the coin was legal
this year the gold coin is illegal and the flasco whiskey is legal so yeah he was always
I haven't heard that one but he was always pointing out the absurdity of FDR yeah so I think one of
the very telling things about FDR was the war and peace issue and you got in here part of his
speech which truly is amazing that he makes when he's running as a candidate as a peace
candidate he says I've seen war I've seen war on land and sea
I have seen blood running from the wounded.
I've seen men coughing out their gasped lungs.
I've seen the dead in the mud.
I've seen cities destroyed.
I've seen 200 limping exhausted men come out of the survivors of the regiment of 1,000 that went forward 48 hours before.
I have seen children starving.
I've seen the agony of mothers and wives.
I hate war.
And you write, as he so often did, FDR exaggerated, his exas.
His exposure to the fighting in World War I was limited and sanitized.
While the Navy had sent him on a guided inspection of American naval and marine bases in Europe,
the main impression conveyed by his contemporaneous diary account was that of a sightseer.
So talk a little bit about that, how he ran as a peace candidate, and then he flipped, pushing us into war.
Well, FDR was playing both sides of the street.
For example, in the 1930s, he'd been the guy that suggests, well, maybe we need neutrality laws.
And then later, he pushed for repeal of the Neutrality Act, saying, I wish I'd never signed it.
He never mentioned that he was the guy that helped to inspire it in the first place.
So he was a rabid interventionist when he was assistant secretary of the Navy under Wilson.
He was constantly trying to imitate his cousin, Theodore, and get some sort of incident, possibly.
So he was a hawk.
But then in the 30s, he sort of realizes there's all this anti-war feeling, and he appeals to that.
he actually applauds the Munich agreement
but then after that he becomes much more
of an interventionist
and
certainly
aligns himself with Winston Churchill and so forth
but a lot of this is done quietly
so he's sort of playing both sides of the street
and he is in trouble
in the 1940 election
his opponent Wendell Wilkie who was
kind of an interventionist, too, but starts talking like an America firster during the last part of the campaign is making inroads.
So FDR is worried about this.
So very shortly before the election, he gives this speech.
He'd never given a speech this strong where he says, I've said this before, and I'll say it again and again and again.
Your boys are not going to be sent into any foreign war, full stop, right?
and Wendell Wilkie heard that on the radio
and he said, that hypocritical son of a bitch
just lost me the election
and whether or not that was true or not, FDR was
that was a clear motivation.
His son went up to him and said,
Dad, why did you say that?
You've never said anything like that before
and he said basically, well, I had to win
you know, for the good of the country, that kind of thing.
So just amoral
an amoral figure, maybe worse, in so many ways.
A very cynical, jaded man, I think, who had great charm.
Yes.
But I never really cared for him, I'm going to confess.
Did you ever see that movie Sunrise at Campobello?
No, I never saw that.
Oh, it was a movie made in the 50s starring Ralph Bellamy, playing FDR in his battle against polio.
And I just, you know, Bellamy capture an FDR in some ways.
It was supposed to be a sympathetic portrayal.
But there was just this charm, which always seemed a little bit phony to me.
Yeah. And very calculating, but very effective.
Yeah, he seemed that way to me as well.
But I always kind of just dismissed that as, you know, when you look at movies at the time,
you know, people came across as very stiff and pretentious and, you know, putting on airs.
That's kind of the way that a lot of people would come across, even in the movies at that time.
They wouldn't come across as, you know, genuine or – and so I kind of just put it up to the zeitgeist of the time, if you will.
But, yeah, it's interesting.
And you begin with his rise to power.
Talk a little bit about that.
Where did this guy come from?
How did you get there?
He had a big advantage in that he was born into comfortable circumstances.
not super wealth, but wealth.
He was a distant cousin of Theodore Roosevelt,
and very distant, like seventh cousin,
but the family had contacts with each other and so forth.
And he went, he did the typical trajectory of someone in that class.
He went to Groton, a very exclusive private school,
and he went to Harvard, he got a Columbia,
law degree from Columbia. He had very mediocre grades. He was not a good student, but he, he was a gladhander. People liked him. He made his impact socially. And then it was, some people approached him and said, Mr. Roosevelt, we'd like you to run for Congress, or not for Congress, for a state legislature in New York. You know, theater was president at the time. They happened to be Democrats. I guess they thought that that was a brilliant move. Now, I say that if,
If the Republicans had approached Franklin, he probably would have run as a Republican.
In fact, he had supported his cousin very openly when his cousin ran for re-election.
His first vote was for Theodore.
But the Democrats asked him.
It was a good Democratic year, 1908.
So he ran as a Democrat and he was able to win.
And from there, he just impressed people.
He got the attention of a guy named Josephus Daniels, who was secret.
Secretary of the Navy, quite a racist, Southern racist type.
But Daniels was charmed by Roosevelt.
He had a very apt comment.
He said, he was just like an actress.
He had that.
He had it, right?
And someone had said it was a case of love at first sight, you know, when Daniel saw him.
And I don't think anything went on, but he made him assistant secretary of Navy.
And from there, Roosevelt was imitating his cousin, either intentionally or by chance.
Theodore had been in the legislature.
Theodore had been Assistant Secretary of the Navy.
And then Theodore was vice presidential candidate, as Roosevelt was in 1920.
So very similarity, a lot of parallels between them.
One difference, though, Franklin did not volunteer to fight in World War I.
He was in his late 30s.
he could have. His cousin
Theodore said, you have to get into
the infantry. Not just the Navy.
You have to get it into the infantry.
You have to get in the fight.
And Roosevelt came back and said, well, my boss
thinks I'm essential.
And maybe his boss did say that.
But Theodore
had a similar boss.
He didn't have to go in, but
Franklin was not the man the theater was.
And so he did not
serve in the military.
So at that point, he was able-bodied, at that point, he was able-bodied and could have.
Yeah, that was before his bout of polio, which was 19.
How old was he?
How old was he?
So he was about how old when that happened?
He was about 39, quite a young man.
And the story, there's an interesting story there.
Now, a lot of people said, can't you say something good about Roosevelt?
I will say that, you know, he showed great.
determination. Of course, he had a lot of, he had a lot of help. He had a lot of doctors. He had a lot
of, you know, leisure time. He had a lot of support. But he showed great courage and overcoming that.
Part of the story that I was surprised by is who did he blame for the polio? He blamed a Republican
center. And the story on this is really fascinating. I begin my book with it. There was an
investigation. Well, there was something called the Newport Scandal, the Newport sex scandal.
Do you recall reading that?
Yeah, no, I skipped over to the Black Inquisition.
What happened was, Roosevelt was Assistant Secretary of the Navy, and there was a guy at one of the naval bases in Newport who was investigating whether there were same-sex relationships going on in the Navy, and thought this was, you know, a major scandal and so forth, and even did his own private investigations where this guy would,
find people to go in and they would actually have sex, right, with these men, right?
To try to entrap them. So Roosevelt found out about this. The investigation was basically had no
funding. The Secretary of War had refused to back it. I mean, the Attorney General
had refused to back it. And Roosevelt stepped in single-handedly and set up a investigative unit
headed by him called Section A in the Department of Navy, which investigated this issue of same-sex
relationships in the Navy, and they would send out investigators who, again, would entrap people
by having sex with them.
And Roosevelt, I think, quite clearly knew what was going on.
a local journalist in Newport pushed back on this and accused Roosevelt of doing this,
and Roosevelt basically responded, said, well, you know, isn't it important to find, you know, to find what's going on here,
why are we so worried about procedure? And it was actually controversially. You would think this period was very anti-gay, and it was.
people in Congress and the press
thought this was abhorrent. These tactics
were beyond the pale.
And that's one of the
things that we've lost. He did his best to
cover it up. And
it weakened it. It
put so much tension on him
that he said that it had
lowered his resistance and made him more
susceptible to
the outbreak of polio. Which may have been
true, actually. Because
it was a lot of it was contaminated water.
But again, if your immunity
you know, if you had low resistance, and so forth.
So he blamed this senator until his dying day for causing his polio.
Well, you know, as you talk about that.
Because of this report investigation, which almost derailed his career, almost destroyed him.
And again, it's the tactic that's involved there.
And everybody did.
And you would think this would be a period where they would say, oh, they're gay, we need to root them out.
They may have thought that, but this is beyond the pale.
And, of course, these people that had been destroyed, many of them were innocent, you know, they didn't get any benefits, right?
They didn't get military funerals.
They were destroyed.
And Roosevelt is able to ride through it, partly because other things go on, that divert public attention.
But the New York Times, as a matter of fact, has a big story where it calls his behavior, they blame him for it.
the Times blames him in this article and basically, you know, comes to the conclusion he's unfit
for office, but he's able to escape this somehow because of other things going on, and it's
forgotten. And most people today don't even know about it. But it's quite an important story
in his life. Well, it reveals his character, which we then saw later when he's coming after
politically and Roosevelt was quite clear that he wasn't worried about the means it was the end
yet something done this is view towards civil liberties these people need to be shut up
some way to shut them up that was a real hallmark of everything that he did you know he doesn't
care i think he was always kind of a default interventionist and i think a lot you know i mean i
think he did have an ideology and i think he he had been a wilsonian interventionist he was a
admirer of Wilson, right? He defended Wilson when he ran for president in 1920, even though
much of the public was sick of Wilson. He defended the worst aspect, the most repressive
aspects of Wilsonianism. So I think that was his default position. That's the best way I could,
I could explain it. I think the relationship with Churchill made a difference, but I think you
see even signs of that before that where he's trying to do it uh his focuses on the north
atlantic by 1941 he is definitely he is desperately trying to provoke an incident yes um in the north
atlantic and he builds up minor incidents or you know into cause celebs and is trying to get
into the war it's clear he wants to do that by 1941 by any means that he he can't
and but the public is hostile to the idea
overwhelmingly the public is
you know does not want to get in another foreign war
they remember World War one they do not want to do that again
but he's able to get aid to Britain through land lease
which is very open-ended but again selling this is
well of course we won't have to go in
you know we can help the British
give them the tools and they will finish the fight
as people used to say um and and and and that kind of thing but kind of where we are right now
with ukraine right kind of where we are right now with ukraine i guess right yeah exactly
yeah we can just give them the weapons and we won't really get involved but the germans aren't
taking the bait uh to the extent that he wants them to so he kind of shifts to the pacific right
and there's massive sanctions against the japanese that preceded pearl harbor and of course um uh what
do you have about Pearl Harbor? What's your take on Pearl Harbor? Did he engineer that to
and keep things secret there in a kind of subversive way? What is your opinion? Okay. Yeah,
again, he is, his focus is the North Atlantic, but he eventually comes to the conclusion,
well, you know, if we're going to go to war at Japan, that's fine with me. And, you know,
maybe we can get into the European war as well.
I don't think, I think that that's part of what he's pushing.
And really since, you know, he, there were opportunities to have peace agreement with Japan.
The Japanese prime minister offers to meet with Roosevelt in the middle of the Pacific to have a summit.
So let's hash this out.
Roosevelt doesn't take the opportunity.
At one point, the Japanese actually say that they were willing to have.
he doesn't take the opportunity so he's he's he's there's sort of a distraction now okay
pearl harvard did roosevelt know about it i don't think he did and my argument for that is
i think the best evidence is that they did know that japanese would attack they thought the attack
would probably be somewhere like the philippines um maybe in you know singapore somewhere like that
they did not think it would be Pearl Harbor.
Very few people thought that.
Almost nobody thought that.
And part of the reason they didn't think that is they didn't think the Japanese were capable.
They didn't think they were good pilots.
They didn't think that they could pull something out like that.
And even the commanders on the ground, and Roosevelt did shortchange them.
Short and Kimmel there at the Pacific, they wanted observation planes, but Roosevelt diverted all resources.
to the North Atlantic.
They wanted, you know, if they had had those observation planes, for example, it might have made all the difference.
He shortchanged them.
But even they thought that the main danger from the Japanese was sabotage.
That's one of the reasons why they put the planes in the middle of the field in many cases.
It made them more vulnerable to attack, but theoretically less vulnerable to sabotage.
So what is Roosevelt's first reaction after the attack?
well it's from a butler who saw him and roosevelt's response was i will go down in disgrace
he thinks my god i didn't expect this i'm going to be in trouble because of this
so i don't think i don't think they knew that the attack was going to be at pearl harbor
partly because they underestimated the Japanese.
I think Roosevelt was reckless, however, that he knew an attack was going to come.
I think he could have done much more to warn naval commanders throughout the Pacific than an attack was going to come.
There were clues that it could have come at Pearl Harbor, naming the time of day.
They did know the time of the day when the Japanese were going to, in the embassy,
had been ordered American embassy to destroy their codes,
and that was at 7.30 a.m.,
which would have been a very good time
for an attack on Pearl Harbor,
and they didn't put two and two together.
So I think it's more incompetence,
but I don't buy the theory that it's been put forward
by people like Stinnett
who makes this argument
that we knew that the Japanese fleet
was on the way and so forth.
I don't see the evidence for that.
We did break,
one of the codes, but we didn't break the crucial, you know, naval code, broke the diplomatic code.
So we knew a lot of what was going on.
Roosevelt knew a lot about it.
He was reading a lot of Japanese mail.
And maybe they could have put two and two together, but I think it was sort of racism in some sense.
They just didn't think the Japanese could pull something like this off.
You know, they found out, didn't they?
Well, talk a little bit about you got your...
I'd be happy to talk with people about it, but I don't buy that that he knew.
sure that it was going to happen at Pearl Harbor sure well talk about fear and emergency
okay well when Roosevelt ran in 1940 1932 he he pledged to maintain sound money now I didn't exactly
say well gold but he huber didn't either but he also gave a speech right before the election
called a little known speech called the covenant speech where he would talk about you know gold contracts
the covenant right he said he would uphold the covenant you know basically i will uphold you know the use of
gold right um then very shortly after the election he makes a decision to go off the gold standard
he calls in his secretary of the treasury who's much more uh actually secretary of state
who's much more conservative than him on financial issues cordel hull and he says cordel
congratulate me we're going off the gold standard tomorrow
And he pulls out some money.
And it was a money that was issued by the, whatever, the Federal Reserve Bank of Tennessee, I guess.
He said, this is from Tennessee, your own state, Cornell.
And what makes this money good?
It's only good because we say it's good.
And again, that is what he did.
Then he does a lot of crazy things after that.
He does a program to purchase gold.
and he sets the
well no not to purchase gold
but to set the price of gold
so he says he has this gold
buying program and how does
he determine the price
he determines it from things like
he says
well I think the price should be
19 cents today because
it's a lucky number
you know he would say things like that
and Roosevelt was very superstitious
he had lucky shoes he had lucky hats
so this is this is not as strange as you might seem and it was just it was just a crazy crazy town
but what saved us in terms of financially in the 30s was we had massive gold imports from both
europe and the soviet union your people are taking their gold for obvious reasons out of those
places and bringing it to the united states so we have a tremendous gold inflow to the
United States through those sort of happy, not happy, tragic accidents, I guess you could
say, both from Russia and from, because Stalin is buying a lot of American goods using gold.
That's part of it.
And, of course, the gold is coming in from Germany because Jews and others are taking their gold
out.
Yeah, it's interesting.
You know, when you look at how he was reacting, how he had his lucky shoes and all the rest of
stuff and how arbitrary things were. That sounds familiar, too, in a disturbing way, doesn't it?
You know, kind of erratic and arbitrary capricious, what he's doing with these things.
We're starting to see a lot of that.
Capricious is a good word. Yeah. Parallels of Trump, but there are big differences, too.
Yeah. But, you know, I think there are, there, there's, there's some parallels that you
control. Mm-hmm. Yeah. So talk a little bit about the end of prohibition. That's, that's one of the
things everybody you know happy days is here again uh how much of that was um did he uh build that up
for his um his campaign and how much of that was really an initiative of his or was it just
that people had had it with alcohol prohibition at that point he got ahead of that was he um was he
opposed on that by the republicans or what what was the situation with the prohibition and um you know
i don't discuss prohibition a lot but but rosal was a stradler he wasn't going to take kind of
positions. He was also a straggler on trade issues and tariff issues. So he was not a leader of the
anti-prohibition forces. There were Democrats who were. The more conservative Democrats, interestingly,
tended to be the more anti-prohibition. And there was a big element in the party. And people were
sick and tired of the prohibition laws by 1932. The Republicans chose to kind of avoid the issue.
Roosevelt
and getting the nomination
it certainly was a popular
position but he also recognized
that this is a popular position
and he came out for
for repeal
of the constitutional amendment
bringing in prohibition
he took a very strong stand
I think there were other motivations though
one was it's a great tax
source and as a matter of fact
during the early new deal
even though they're talking about income taxes,
most of the tax collections are from excise taxes.
People like, things like cosmetics, cigarettes, alcohol.
Yeah.
That's where the bulk of the revenue is raised.
So Roosevelt is raising the tax top rate to, I don't know,
eventually it gets well over 90%, but it's going way, way up.
He makes a big deal about this,
but that means that the wealthy find ways to find tax shelters they don't pay it so where does the actual money comes it comes from the nickels and dimes of people going to movies there's a tax on movie tickets it comes from the nickels and dimes of working class people but roosevelt is very clever and never acknowledging that and of course the excise taxes on liquor as well yeah it's always i think is maybe in the back of his mind too and he uses that revenue source in a major way it's always soaked the
the rich and then it's always the poor middle class to pay all the taxes that's that's another
thing that never since the stark example of that yes another thing never stops and of course
the revenues you know that's what they called the people that were coming after the stills
and the in the mountains and everything because that was really what they wanted they wanted the money
that was there so talk a little bit about the supreme court packing issue as well and his
fight to essentially just completely rewrite the constitution when we look at
what happened with the New Deal.
Should be called the New Constitution.
Well, Roosevelt proposes, he keeps his quiet again, but then in 1937, he's all puffed up.
Because the 1936 election was one of the more spectacular landslides in American history,
partly because Roosevelt was very effective in using New Deal money, targeted money.
And I could talk about that as well, how he was able to win such a big majority.
But he thought, I'm going to get a third new detail, right?
He wanted to be more radical.
He wanted to do more.
But he thought, what good will that do if the Supreme Court, which has been striking down measures like
the AAA and the National Recovery Administration, what good will all my effort be unless I get
a sympathetic court?
Okay.
Well, he decides, he proposes to increase the size of the court and his, he gives his speech where he basically says they're overextended.
They're old.
They're tired.
I want to help them.
You know, they've got a big workload.
Well, he gives his speech and he wants to increase the size of the court.
And he obviously thinks he can pull it off because I don't know, you're talking about something like, gee whiz, the Republicans are down to like.
16, 20 senators?
I mean, he's got an overwhelming majority.
You would think that he could pull this off easily.
And he's so disingenuous.
And it's so obvious what he's doing
that there is a big movement against court packing
led by a new dealer, Senator Burton Wheeler,
who'd been an ally of Roosevelt and turns against him.
And Wheeler is the ideal guy to lead this effort.
The Republicans are very smart.
They lay back and let the Democrats take leadership, and they do.
Now, the campaign is very grueling, and it becomes clear during the campaign that Roosevelt is essentially won,
because one of the justices on the court is switched sides, and it's clear that he's probably going to get all of its New Deal programs sustained.
But he keeps pushing on.
I guess it becomes a matter of principle for him.
He keeps pushing on.
He pushes, pushes, pushes.
The majority leader of the Senate is exhausted.
He is in bad shape, and he ends up having a heart attack
and is found with a copy of the congressional record in his hand.
His name is Joe Robinson.
And Roosevelt doesn't go to Robinson's funeral.
And there's a lot of controversy about that.
Why don't you go to the guy's funeral?
Probably because he was pissed off that Robinson wasn't doing a better job.
And he says, well, he would understand.
He had to fight for the, and it hurts Roosevelt, no end, and Roosevelt is defeated.
So in a lot of ways, that is an example of a left-right coalition.
There are many examples, but that's one.
He's defeated by Democrats.
Could you imagine that happening under Biden?
I would find it difficult to imagine that.
Or Franklender Trump in the opposite direction.
That's right.
But it did happen then, which says something positive about America.
Americans during that period.
Americans in Congress include it.
That's right.
Much higher level of character in a lot of ways.
And I've mentioned many times about the fact, you know, we have our war on drugs that's
been going on for over half a century.
But we had the 18th and the 21st Amendment, which said that they had enough respect for
the Constitution, that everybody had, they had a constitutional amendment to stop
in order to start it and then stop the alcohol prohibition because they knew that they
didn't have that power in the Constitution.
but today, you know, we don't care about that.
We just do whatever we wish.
I think it's kind of interesting.
Everybody agreed on that.
We have to have a constitutional amendment.
That's right.
It's one of the biggest arguments against the war on drugs, I think, is the fact that we have those two amendments that are there.
But when you go back and you look at this particular case with the Supreme Court, the fact that he's got the votes, but he still wants to press on with this thing because it's a matter of personal prestige and power, I think.
The same type of thing that we see with Trump.
And yet, does he take the kind of vengeance against people who go against him in kind of a vendetta that we see Trump taking against Republicans, let's say?
He doesn't attend the guy's funeral or whatever, but, you know, he gives him the cold shoulder.
But did he really go after people like Trump will go after somebody like Thomas Massey who opposes him on his agenda?
Yeah, again, he keeps a secret.
And this is what's interesting.
there is an investigation under another loyalist in fact he'd been offered the position on the supreme court before black but wanted to stay in congress his name was senator sherman mitten
and if you search his name, the thing that usually comes up is there's a bridge named after him,
but now maybe that'll change.
But Newton was a very young guy.
He was already in the Senate leadership, first term, and he was very tight with Roosevelt.
And Mitton starts his own investigation, basically succeeds blacks, the black committee.
It's the same committee, but black is now in the U.S. Supreme Court.
And so Minton heads this investigation.
They can't search telegrams anymore, but one of the things they do do is they use Mitten gets permission to look at the IRS tax records of people he targets, for example.
He gets that.
But Minton gets very frustrated because there's a lot of putback.
people pushback people are very upset about his methods and he's he's doesn't he lacks black
subtlety if black had some subtlety minton is just charging for him um and so mitten gives
this speech he said well we need a law against these big newspapers because most of the press was
against roosevelt so he said let's make it a felony to publish anything known to be untrue fake news
basically the fact they use that term i think false news or fake news yeah and he proposes this bill
and um what is the reaction to the bill you almost universal opposition
sets in almost from the beginning as it is setting in roosevelt has asked about the
mitten bill at a a a news conference and i think roosevelt was the guy that had the idea i think he
put it mitten up to it i can't prove that but i think it's true because mitten was not the kind of guy to
go off on his own and he reflects what roosevelt thought of the press he was asked about this and he said
well you know uh if we had such a bill we wouldn't even have enough room in the federal prison system
to hold all the prisoners and it gets a little laugh right yeah and then he's he's as he moves on to a new
topic, and I wish they'd done
follow-ups. They didn't. He says,
you boys asked for it, you know.
That's what he says.
You boys asked for it,
you know, I mean, you reporters,
you know, people, you asked for this.
And then he moves on to the next topic.
And he drops it, right?
Because Mitten ends up
dropping it. And it
discredits his investigation,
and his investigation is pretty much
shut down after that. So
FDRs, those two
years after the 1936 election are a low point for FDR there's pushback against him he loses
core packing the Minton committee collapses and he is he puts all of his attention on court packing
and as a result he isn't able to get his radical new deal program in 1938 37 38 that he wanted
because he focuses almost entirely on court packing and then later after really is too late on
these investigations.
You know, it's kind of interesting when we look at this period of time, you know,
when all the institutions were being reconsidered, reinvented, if you will, and he's
fighting against the constitutional pattern that had been accepted, that he was getting
pushed back, even from his own party against some of this stuff, because as we talked
about, people understood the principles.
He had a lot of people who did not share his idea that the end justifies the means.
And we don't see that today.
We're in a much more dangerous situation, I think, when we look at that.
That's why it's good to go back and look at history.
You look at the radical change that was accomplished during the FDR period of time.
And you look at the fact that now we have people on both sides have become unhinged from or have detached themselves from basic principles about free speech, the rule of law, and having a due process to investigate things like that.
I think we're in a very dangerous time right now.
I think this book helps get people to understand that if we look at the context, the historical context of this.
Yeah, and we're seeing a lot of people on the right who were talking about free speech and local control, states rights.
Yeah, turned down a dime.
That's right.
This is very discouraging to see this.
Yeah.
Now they want to come after their idea of fake news, you know.
Now they've got their own fake news vendettas that they want to come after.
So it is.
There is so much here.
I mean, we could do several interviews with this.
This is an excellent book.
It is a very important presidency to understand the context of the times in which we live in our government.
And I really highly recommend this book, FDR, A Political Life by David Beto.
And you spell your name as B-E-I-T-O.
Is that correct?
That's right.
Yeah.
So it's not spelled like the Texas politician candidate.
Oh, please, no.
And a lot of people will call him Beto O'Rourke, but I think it's Beto, actually.
Oh, yeah.
I believe that's the way his name is pronounced.
Yeah.
I keep telling people that, even if it isn't true.
But I think it is true.
I think it is true.
Yeah, I used to always call him Robert Francis O'Rourke or whatever his original name was.
I said he's a trans-Hispanic.
He identifies as Hispanic, even though he's not Hispanic.
I think he's a husband now.
Let's keep it that way.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah, we don't want to resurrect him with any attention.
I guess. But an excellent book. And thank you so much for joining us. And there is much to learn
in terms of politics and history. It's a very seminal presidency, unfortunately, for many of us
who'd like to see government that follows the Constitution. FDR's presidency was an unmitigated
disaster. And it bears looking at it and see if we see any repetition in current events as a warning,
as a harbinger of what's coming, because as we were talking about earlier, you know,
this whole stuff of secretly getting information on his enemies.
We saw that immediately, after World War II ended, we saw that immediately being transferred
over to the NSA, the CIA, the FBI, all these people, that using the income tax,
aspiring people, these same tactics used over and over again.
Thank you very much.
David Beto, the book is FDR, A Political Life.
Thank you, folks, for joining us.
Have a good day.
The common man.
They created common core to dumb down our children.
They created common past to track and control us.
Their commons project to make sure the commoners own nothing and the communist future.
They see the common man as simple, unsophisticated, ordinary.
But each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God.
That is what we have in common.
That is what they want to take away.
Their most powerful weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation.
They desire to know everything about us while they hide everything from us.
It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide.
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