He ordered every newspaper in both occupied and unoccupied France to put the likeness of Dalin [?] on its first page. The order was obeyed. But did your agents notice that somehow most of the pictures in the shop windows happened to fall face downward? Did your agents tell you proudly that every paper in France published Dalin's picture on page one? But did they add, Mr. S..., that more than half of the papers printed his picture in the fifth column.

And now let's come to this new propaganda campaign which starts tomorrow in America. You know, Mr. S..., Britain has eyes and ears all over Europe, even in Germany. And here, we know all about your new "peace offensive." It has died before it was born. Gabby Goebbels thought he could sell America this bill of goods, and the publicity from his agents there is all set to begin tomorrow. His agents will say, "Do the people of America really know what the Lend-Lease Bill really means? It means," your agents will thunder, "that America is a guarantor of a British victory. By implication, this means too, that America has a morale obligation to help the allies of Britain. Now the new order has been established in Europe. There is peace in Denmark, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Belgium, Holland, France, Norway, Greece, Yugoslavia. Any American interference or aid will result in civil war in these countries, which are now happy under German protection. If America persists in helping Great Britain, it will mean chaos on the continent."

That is the ingenious argument formulated by yourself, and the good doctor. Some of your argument is true. America will continue to help Britain, help the people of the countries you have temporarily conquered. You bet there'll be chaos on the continent, and heads will fall, and there will be just retribution. You say there is peace in countries in which you now hold temporary sway? Not peace, Mr. Schicklgruber, but paralysis--a paralysis which will only be temporary. Today the continent is a vast prison under martial law. You're right in saying that under the terms of the Lend-Lease Bill my country owes a moral obligation to help Britain put her fallen allies on their feet again. The people of my country won't be surprised tomorrow when you point out that the Lend-lease Bill was, in fact, a declaration of war against you.

Mr. Schicklgruber, you have given orders to all of the continent which is under your control to publish prominently the speeches of Senator Wheeler, Mr. Hoover, Colonel Lindbergh, and others whom we loosely call "isolationists". Don't take too much comfort from their speeches. Don't forget that they are just as American as are those of us who are one hundred percent for even stronger intervention. They follow their own star. And of millions of us who think that it is a lone star in an artificial sky, we also realize that this is their privileged, and we would rather fight than to have their views suppressed.