vitanola
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 4,254
- Location
- Gopher Prairie, MI
"Bumper Surfing?"
"Do you like Bathing Beauties?"
"I don't know, I've never bathed one!"
"Bumper Surfing?"
Yes, it's my car, a 1931 Ford sedan. Here it is on the big screen:Nice car in your picture! Yours?
Drive carefully, and enjoy, W2
Raccoon coat.
I would love to get my hands on one of these
Me too. I would wear it---a lot.
Lindy -- dubbed by Walter Winchell as "The Lone Ostrich" and "Herr von Lindbergh" -- really crossed the line with a series of radio speeches in 1939-40 in which he described the war as a battle for "the survival of the white race," and suggested that "Jewish forces" were conspiring to drive America into the conflict. His wife was on board with this as well, writing a book in 1940 called "The Wave of the Future," in which she suggested that European-style fascism was in fact that coming wave, and America should best prepare for it.
Lindbergh's final downfall came with a speech to an America First rally in 1941 which even his supporters considered baldly anti-Semitic. America First had already lost most of its credibility by that point, but the Lindbergh speech, which he gave against the advice of everyone from his wife on down, was the end of the line for his own credibility.
To the end of his life, Lindbergh never publicly repudiated any of his pre-war comments, and privately insisted that he had been right in every one of them.