JF Ptak Science Books Quick Post
It takes all kinds, as this pamphlet clearly if not not cleverly shows. There was some opposition to FDR as he went for his fourth term as president in 1944--by the summer of that year the outcome of WWII had swung positively towards the Allies, the Depression was broken, and for fighting in a world war the U.S. was in pretty good shape. There was of course opposition to his re-election, though in hindsight it is hard to see the why of the question, even including the unprecedented fourth term following the unprecedented third term. But the man was doing his job: he had basically saved the country and now was winning the war. Even though FDR trounced Thomas Dewey in that election, it wasn't as though a sizable percentage of U.S. citizens hadn't had enough of him: FDR received 53% of the popular vote, won 36 of 48 states, and slammed the electoral college 432-99. Still, there were only 3 million votes separating Roosevelt from Dewey in the popular vote (25 mil-22 mil), which seems odd, as it feels particularly uncomfortable thinking of Thomas Dewey heading the U.S. war effort for the closing two years or so of the war. Lincoln crushed the lead-footed Gen'l McClellan in the electoral college in 1864, and wound up beating him handily in the popular vote--but given the stature of Lincoln at that point, one might have expected him to pull more than a 10-point difference over the field commander who felt he never had enough troops, but he didn't. Anyway, this pamphlet--written by Melissia Castle with cartoons by Pearl Porterfield--took long and myopic aim at the New Deal, trying to crush the enthusiasm for FDR. I can't find anything on Ms. Castle, and can only find a possible little bit for Ms. Porterfield (as a studio hairdresser and colorist to Marilyn Monroe and Jean Harlow, though I am not sure if this is the correct Pearl Porterfield)--the book itself also seems to be pretty much nowhere, so it looks as though it probably was published to little effect.
And the confusing back cover:
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