Connections Students Make
Last year's students noticed great similarities between the Great Depression times and the present. In a class examining FDR's comments at the time, they were struck by how much this Fireside Chat from September 6, 1936 applies to today.  What do you think?

 

“Tomorrow is Labor Day. Labor Day in this country has never been a class holiday. It has always

been a national holiday. It has never had more significance as a national holiday than it has now. In

other countries the relationship of employer and employee has more or less been accepted as a class

relationship not readily to be broken through. In this country we insist, as an essential of the American

way of life, that the employer-employee relationship should be one between free men and equals.

We refuse to regard those who work with hand or brain as different from or inferior to those who live

from their property. We insist that labor is entitled to as much respect as property. But our workers

with hand and brain deserve more than respect for their labor. They deserve practical protection in

the opportunity to use their labor at a return adequate to support them at a decent and constantly

rising standard of living, and to accumulate a margin of security against the inevitable vicissitudes of

life.

“The average man must have that twofold opportunity if we are to avoid the growth of a class

conscious society in this country.

“There are those who fail to read both the signs of the times and American history. They would

try to refuse the worker any effective power to bargain collectively, to earn a decent livelihood and

to acquire security. It is those short-sighted ones, not labor, who threaten this country with that class

dissension which in other countries has led to dictatorship and the establishment of fear and hatred

as the dominant emotions in human life.

“All American workers, brain workers and manual workers alike, and all the rest of us whose

well-being depends on theirs, know that our needs are one in building an orderly economic democracy

in which all can profit and in which all can be secure from the kind of faulty economic direction

which brought us to the brink of common ruin seven years ago.

“There is no cleavage between white collar workers and manual workers, between artists and

artisans, musicians and mechanics, lawyers and accountants and architects and miners.

“Tomorrow, Labor Day, belongs to all of us. Tomorrow, Labor Day, symbolizes the hope of all

Americans. Anyone who calls it a class holiday challenges the whole concept of American democracy.

“The Fourth of July commemorates our political freedom—a freedom which without economic

freedom is meaningless indeed. Labor Day symbolizes our determination to achieve an economic

freedom for the average man which will give his political freedom reality.”