Bill Moyers, At Four Freedoms Ceremony: We Need To Rekindle FDR’s Passion For The Poor

Bill Moyers gave the following remarks at the Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute’s twentieth-anniversary Four Freedoms ceremony, where he received the Freedom of Speech award. The remarks below were printed in The Nation

Thank you for this recognition and the spirit of the evening. Thanks especially for giving me the chance to sit here awhile thinking about my father. Henry Moyers was an ordinary man who dropped out of the fourth grade because his family needed him to pick cotton to help make ends meet. The Depression knocked him off the farm and flat on his back. When I was born he was making two dollars a day working on the highway to Oklahoma City. He never made over $100 a week in the whole of his working life, and he made that only when he joined the union on the last job he held.

He voted for Franklin Roosevelt in four straight elections, and he would have gone on voting for him until kingdom come if both had lived that long. I once asked him why, and he said, “Because the President’s my friend.” Now, my father never met FDR. No politician ever paid him much note, but he was sure he had a friend in the White House during the worst years of his life. When by pure chance I wound up working there many years later, and my parents came for a visit, my father wanted to see the Roosevelt Room. I don’t know quite how to explain it, except that my father knew who was on his side and who wasn’t, and for twelve years he had no doubt where FDR stood. The first time I remember him with tears in his eyes was when Roosevelt died. He had lost his friend.

We can’t revive the man and certainly we wouldn’t want to revisit the times, but we can rekindle the spirit. There are 37 million people in this country who are poor; there are 57 million who are near poor, making $20,000 to $40,000 a year–one divorce, one pink slip, one illness away from a free fall. That’s almost one-third of America still living on the edge. They need a friend in the White House. My father, with his fourth-grade education and two fingers with the missing tips from the mix-up at the cotton gin, got it when Roosevelt spoke. “I can’t talk like him,” he said, “but I sure do think like him.” My father might not have had the words for it, but he said amen when FDR talked about economic royalism. Sitting in front of our console radio, he got it when Roosevelt said that private power no less than public power can bring America to ruin in the absence of democratic controls.

Don’t think for a moment he didn’t get it when Roosevelt said that a government by money was as much to be feared as a government by mob, or when he said that the political equality we once had won was meaningless in the face of economic inequality. My father got it when he heard his friend in the White House talk about how “a small group had concentrated into their own hands an almost complete control over other people’s property, other people’s money, other people’s labor–other people’s lives.” My father knew FDR was talking for him when he said life was no longer free, liberty no longer real, men could no longer follow the pursuit of happiness–against economic tyranny such as this. And my father listened raptly when his friend the President said, “The American citizen”–my father knew the President was speaking of him–“could appeal only to the organized power of government.”

So thank you for reminding us that liberalism is less about ideology and doctrine than about friendship and faith–the bond between a patrician in the White House and a working man on the Texas-Oklahoma border and their mutual belief in America as a shared project. Thank you for this reminder of how we might yet turn the listing ship of state. My father thanks you, too.
Re-printed from The Nation

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2 Responses to Bill Moyers, At Four Freedoms Ceremony: We Need To Rekindle FDR’s Passion For The Poor

  1. An awful lot of the poor got that way through a series of bad choices. Beginning with not taking school seriously or dropping out, only doing the minimum at work, not working to improve themselves, playing the lottery, smoking when they can’t afford it, getting divorced when they can’t afford it, not saving for retirement or saving at all. Not all are poor for these reasons but many are.

  2. T. Ruddick says:

    That’s the common complaint, Rick.

    But it’s not well supported by real data.

    Consider what’s claimed at:
    http://mediamatters.org/items/200604210003

    The majority of the homeless in the USA are not there due to “choices” that they made. Many suffer from mental illness; others wound up financially destroyed by health care costs (even with insurance, a major health crisis can break you); 25% are under the age of 18.

    Our veterans are 400% more likely to wind up homeless than non-veterans. You may, I guess, conclude that enlisting is a bad choice, if you want to come down on individual factors.

    “Poor people made choices” is a staple argument, despite its error. I wonder when people will start to rely more on evidence than Reagan-era sound-bites? (Which, of course, replaced Johnson-era sound-bites in the national delusion.)

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