His Excellency Harold B. Butler -3 August 5, 1942. case in logic, gets backing from an admirable national misconception. For the average American still believes that America is invincible on the home rounds. That is our danger as well as America Nothing effective has been done to meet this situation. I have no doubt that immense industry and scholarship is being poured into your propaganda machine. But the machine is whirling in thin air. In little ways, it may palliate the dancers. But it cannot effect a cure. For this is not a problem in propaganda. The job is not to expound Britain to America. It is definitely more fundamental than that. The job is not to tinker up the old situation. It is to build a new one. It is to change the present ill-designed relatively unworkable scheme of British American partnership into absolute British American unity. It is to convince the common man of America that there will not be victory unless America and the British Empire are one. In the philosophy of the old order, America and Britain were designed to be competitors and opponents. War in itself cannot wholly overcome that fact. It will take a revolutionary act to unite the English-speaking people. It will take a new purpose, inspiration, and leadership. It will take a new order of dem This problem in British American unity arose when war began. For then it was plain to thinking men that world fascism was on the march against world democracy; that nothing but the maximum efficiency of English-speaking democracy was good enough to win; that maximum efficiency depended upon the absolute unity of the English-speaking people; |