wideright
New member
- Aug 7, 2008
- 7,854
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No Ult Sig break today Keith???!!! Man I'm gonna melt down. Been trying to contain the excitement all day. 
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:grouphug:ASTROBURN said:Got my cards in the mail yesterday, but couldnt open them til this morning. Didnt get home til after one in the morning due to band practice. Cant wait to scan em and add em to my site, then onto here. Thanks again George!
Sorry to hear about the fuel pump Joe. I wish you were closer to my neck of the woods so I could help you a bit on the price.
We don't have mega millions here. We have power ball.tramers said:save your money i just bought winning mega ticket :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
So she takes away a book about a racist and let's him read the drivel of a communist who favored Japanese internment camps during WW2? That sounds about right. ::facepalm::thefatguy said:And then mommy took the Ty Cobb bio away and gave you more age appropriate reading material....Green Eggs and Ham :lol:TBTwinsFan said:thefatguy said:Yeah, racism is hard to understand at 6 :shock:TBTwinsFan said:Ty Cobb had a pretty good Biography of him written. I was really young when I was reading it so I never finished it (it was longer and a little complex for me back then) but I would love to give it another shot.
I don't really know if the book was filled with racism, but I remember that parts were pretty heated.
His feelings on the Japanese were basically status quo at the time, since as you may recall, they had just bombed us... ::facepalm::As World War II began, Geisel turned to political cartoons, drawing over 400 in two years as editorial cartoonist for the left-leaning New York City daily newspaper, PM.[19] Geisel's political cartoons, later published in Dr. Seuss Goes to War, denounced ****** and Mussolini and were highly critical of non-interventionists ("isolationists"), most notably Charles Lindbergh, who opposed US entry into the war.[20] One cartoon[21] depicted all Japanese Americans as latent traitors or fifth-columnists, while at the same time other cartoons deplored the racism at home against Jews and blacks that harmed the war effort. His cartoons were strongly supportive of President Roosevelt's handling of the war, combining the usual exhortations to ration and contribute to the war effort with frequent attacks on Congress[22] (especially the Republican Party[23]), parts of the press (such as the New York Daily News, Chicago Tribune and Washington Times-Herald),[24] and others for criticism of Roosevelt, criticism of aid to the Soviet Union,[25][26] investigation of suspected Communists,[27] and other offenses that he depicted as leading to disunity and helping the Nazis, intentionally or inadvertently.
In 1942, Geisel turned his energies to direct support of the U.S. war effort. First, he worked drawing posters for the Treasury Department and the War Production Board. Then, in 1943, he joined the Army as a Captain (OF-2) and was commander of the Animation Departmant of the First Motion Picture Unit of the United States Army Air Forces, where he wrote films that included Your Job in Germany, a 1945 propaganda film about peace in Europe after World War II; Our Job in Japan, and the Private Snafu series of adult army training films. While in the Army, he was awarded the Legion of Merit.[28] Our Job in Japan became the basis for the commercially released film, Design for Death (1947), a study of Japanese culture that won the Academy Award for Documentary Feature
Geisel was a liberal Democrat and a supporter of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal. His early political cartoons show a passionate opposition to fascism, and he urged to oppose it, both before and after the entry of the United States into World War II. His cartoons tended to regard the fear of communism as overstated, finding the greater threat in the Dies Committee and those who threatened to cut the US's "life line"[41] to Stalin and the USSR, the ones carrying "our war load".[42]
Geisel's cartoons also called attention to the early stages of the Holocaust and denounced discrimination in the USA against African Americans and Jews. Geisel himself experienced anti-Semitism: in his college days, he was mistaken for a Jew and denied entry into conservative social circles, although he was actually of German ancestry and a practising Christian.[citation needed]
Geisel supported the Japanese American internment during World War II. His treatment of the Japanese and of Japanese Americans, between whom he often failed to differentiate, has struck many readers as a moral blind spot
After the war, though, Geisel overcame his feelings of animosity, using his book Horton Hears a Who! (1954) as an allegory for the Hiroshima bombing and the American post-war occupation of Japan, as well as dedicating the book to a Japanese friend.
Is Jesse a Lorax?ChasHawk said:His feelings on the Japanese were basically status quo at the time, since as you may recall, they had just bombed us... ::facepalm::As World War II began, Geisel turned to political cartoons, drawing over 400 in two years as editorial cartoonist for the left-leaning New York City daily newspaper, PM.[19] Geisel's political cartoons, later published in Dr. Seuss Goes to War, denounced ****** and Mussolini and were highly critical of non-interventionists ("isolationists"), most notably Charles Lindbergh, who opposed US entry into the war.[20] One cartoon[21] depicted all Japanese Americans as latent traitors or fifth-columnists, while at the same time other cartoons deplored the racism at home against Jews and blacks that harmed the war effort. His cartoons were strongly supportive of President Roosevelt's handling of the war, combining the usual exhortations to ration and contribute to the war effort with frequent attacks on Congress[22] (especially the Republican Party[23]), parts of the press (such as the New York Daily News, Chicago Tribune and Washington Times-Herald),[24] and others for criticism of Roosevelt, criticism of aid to the Soviet Union,[25][26] investigation of suspected Communists,[27] and other offenses that he depicted as leading to disunity and helping the Nazis, intentionally or inadvertently.
In 1942, Geisel turned his energies to direct support of the U.S. war effort. First, he worked drawing posters for the Treasury Department and the War Production Board. Then, in 1943, he joined the Army as a Captain (OF-2) and was commander of the Animation Departmant of the First Motion Picture Unit of the United States Army Air Forces, where he wrote films that included Your Job in Germany, a 1945 propaganda film about peace in Europe after World War II; Our Job in Japan, and the Private Snafu series of adult army training films. While in the Army, he was awarded the Legion of Merit.[28] Our Job in Japan became the basis for the commercially released film, Design for Death (1947), a study of Japanese culture that won the Academy Award for Documentary Feature
Geisel was a liberal Democrat and a supporter of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal. His early political cartoons show a passionate opposition to fascism, and he urged to oppose it, both before and after the entry of the United States into World War II. His cartoons tended to regard the fear of communism as overstated, finding the greater threat in the Dies Committee and those who threatened to cut the US's "life line"[41] to Stalin and the USSR, the ones carrying "our war load".[42]
Geisel's cartoons also called attention to the early stages of the Holocaust and denounced discrimination in the USA against African Americans and Jews. Geisel himself experienced anti-Semitism: in his college days, he was mistaken for a Jew and denied entry into conservative social circles, although he was actually of German ancestry and a practising Christian.[citation needed]
Geisel supported the Japanese American internment during World War II. His treatment of the Japanese and of Japanese Americans, between whom he often failed to differentiate, has struck many readers as a moral blind spot
After the war, though, Geisel overcame his feelings of animosity, using his book Horton Hears a Who! (1954) as an allegory for the Hiroshima bombing and the American post-war occupation of Japan, as well as dedicating the book to a Japanese friend.
And if he was a Communist, then so is Jesse.