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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Ronald Reagan:

“In a phase of this struggle not widely known, some of us came toe to toe with this enemy this evil force in our own community in Hollywood, and make no mistake about it, this is an evil force. Don’t be deceived because you are not hearing the sound of gunfire, because even so you are fighting for your lives. And you’re fighting against the best organized and the most capable enemy of freedom and of right and decency that has ever been abroad in the world. Some years ago, back in the thirties, a man who was apparently just a technician came to Hollywood to take a job in our industry, an industry whose commerce is in tinsel and colored lights and make-believe. He went to work in the studios, and there were few to know he came to our town on direct orders from the Kremlin. When he quietly left our town a few years later the cells had been formed and planted in virtually all of our organizations, our guilds and unions. The framework for the Communist front organizations had been established.

“It was some time later, under the guise of a jurisdictional strike involving a dispute between two unions, that we saw war come to Hollywood. Suddenly there were 5,000 tin-hatted, club-carrying pickets outside the studio gates. We saw some of our people caught by these hired henchmen; we saw them open car doors and put their arms across them and break them until they hung straight down the side of the car, and then these tin-hatted men would send our people on into the studio. We saw our so-called glamour girls, who certainly had to be conscious of what a scar on the face or a broken nose could mean career-wise going through those picket lines day after day without complaint. Nor did they falter when they found the bus which they used for transportation to and from work in flames from a bomb that had been thrown into it just before their arrival. Two blocks from the studio everyone would get down on hands and knees on the floor to avoid the bricks and stones coming through the windows. And the 5,000 pickets out there in their tin hats weren’t even motion picture workers. They were maritime workers from the waterfront—members of Mr. Harry Bridges’ union.

“We won our fight in Hollywood, cleared them out after seven long months in which even homes were broken, months in which many of us carried arms that were granted us by the police, and in which policemen lived in our homes, guarding our children at night.”

https://whatrocks.github.io/commencement-db/1957-ronald-reagan-eureka-college/


14 posted on 04/26/2021 8:25:02 PM PDT by Brian Griffin
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To: Brian Griffin

“They were maritime workers from the waterfront—members of Mr. Harry Bridges’ union.”

Bridges was a communist who even called a strike during WWII and shut off supplies to our troops in the Pacific. Why the bastard was not hung as a traitor, I don’t know.

I knew a marine captain who told me his men went into battle with just one round of ammunition each due to Bridges strike. The marine swore he would kill Bridges after the war, but eventually thought better of it.


19 posted on 04/26/2021 9:10:55 PM PDT by DeFault User
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