The U.S. arms embargo of the Spanish Civil War, and FDR’s Illegal, bumbling attempt to send covert military aid to Spanish Reds in 1938.
🧵1 /17
As Spain was engulfed by civil war, both the American people and FDR’s State Department were firmly opposed to any U.S. intervention in the conflict. Secretary of State Cordell Hull was a strong advocate for an arms embargo. 2/17
FDR’s Ambassadors in Europe were suspicious the radicalism of Spain’s Loyalists, and their ties to the USSR. Many in the State Department believed that a victory by the Loyalists would be a victory for the Bolsheviks in Europe. 3/17
The American people were even more opposed than the State Department to any foreign intervention. The Nye Committee hearings had convinced many Americans that intervention in WW I had been “driven by bankers and munitions traders with business interests in Europe." 4/17
With strong public support, Congress passed a series of Neutrality Acts in the 1930s. The Spanish Arms Embargo bill passed unanimously in the Senate and by 411 votes to 1 in the House.
5/17
But the Spanish Reds were not without comrades in high places. In particular, Treasury Secretary Harold Morgenthau would come to oppose the embargo.
6/17
With FDR’s support, Morgenthau had moved to circumvent the Neutrality Act and FDR’s own State Department by purchasing Spanish silver from cash-strapped the Loyalists, despite General Francisco Franco’s claims that the Communists had stolen the silver from the Bank of Spain.
7/17
While U.S. Leftists strongly favored the Spanish Reds, American Catholics tended to be more sympathetic toward Franco and the Nationalists. Catholic opposition to the Loyalist had been driven by the Red Terror – the mass-killing of Catholic clerics and burning of churches.
8/17
As the war dragged on FDR increasingly feared that a Nationalist victory would undermine the Western Democracies. By 1938, FDR “clearly favored the Loyalists” and was searching for politically feasible ways a lifting the embargo.
9/17
Catholic anti-Communism seemed to insurmountable obstacle blocking FDR's desire to support the Spanish Reds. FDR feared an intense backlash in the 1938 elections if he pressed ahead with repeal of the embargo.
10/17
Faced with opposition from the American people, the Congress, and his own State Department, FDR nonetheless resolved to break U.S. law and send illegal covert military aid to the Spanish Reds. There seemed to be an opportunity as France had reopened its border with Spain.
11/17
Under the embargo act, “transshipment” was expressly illegal – meaning an arms dealer could not ship military aircraft to France, for the purpose of sending them on the Spain. Nevertheless, this is precisely what FDR proposed to do.
12/17
In May of 1938, an agent for Loyalist Spain began making arrangements for a large purchase of military aircraft. He seemed confident that he could evade the U.S. embargo. Aircraft industry informants immediately informed the State Department of the suspicions scheme.
13/17
In France, U.S. Ambassador Bullitt was stunned when the Spanish Ambassador to France informed him that FDR had personally had approved the illegal arms deal. Bullet sent a discreet warning to FDR and the State Department.
14/17
Bullitt soon received another shock, when he was contacted by FDR’s brother-in-law (Elenore’s brother Hall). Bullitt was informed that about 150 aircraft were ready to ship to Spain. Once again, Bullitt was assured that FDR has personally approved the illegal arms shipment.
15/17
Bullitt thew cold water on the scheme - informing Hall that France had again closed the frontier to arms shipments. Bullitt then sent another discreet, but stern warning to FDR, stating that he ‘‘could not imagine a moment more unpropitious’’ to organize covert arms sales. 16/17
With the frontier closed, and the State Department alert and opposed the embargo violation, FDR’s scheme to break U.S. law to help the Reds collapsed.
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The “De Mau Mau” gang terrorized the Chicago area in 1972: They murdered at least nine Whites - Including with home-invasions that drew comparisons to the Manson Family murders. 🧵/20
The origins of broader “Mau Mau” movement are somewhat murky. But it seems clear that several of the Chicago Mau Mau killers were disgruntled Vietnam veterans. This included Marines Ruben Taylor, Michael Clark, and Nathanial Burse.
2/20
Several of the Chicago Mau Maus met at Malcom X College. They managed to get expelled for intimidating and beating up teachers and fellow students.
3/20
Yankee-Irish conflict and the Boston Draft Riot of 1863: Refugees from the Great Famine caused Boston’s Irish population to explode - rising from a mere handful, to over a third of the city’s population.
One Yankee complained that Boston had become the “Dublin of America." 🧵/26
The city simply could not cope with the deluge. Poverty stricken and unskilled, the new arrivals were packed into crowded tenements. Disease and unsanitary conditions took a terrible toll. During a cholera epidemic, the life-expectancy of Irish males fell to fourteen years. 2/26
Not surprisingly, this tidal-wave of poverty-stricken Catholic immigrants did not receive a warm welcome from the Puritan-descended Yankees of Boston. The “shattering of Boston’s ethnic homogeneity” created an intense anti-Irish, anti-Catholic backlash. 3/26
White Flight from the Bronx – 1950 to 1980:
> The borough saw an explosive increase in crime, drug traffic, and arson during its demographic transformation.
🧵1/9 (h/t @Steve_Sailer )
The advent of NYC public transportation transformed the borough from farmland to a “streetcar suburb.” The population exploded with ethnic immigrants – Mainly Jews, but also Irish and Italians. Even during hard economic times The Bronx had been a safe place for families. 2/9
As late as 1950, The Bronx was still about 90 percent White, and the residents were enjoying life in their tranquil neighborhood. But The Bronx residents saw a rapid increase in crime and drugs as demographic change transformed life in the borough. 3/9
Historian William Henry Chamberlin discussing the post-WWII ethnic cleansing of ethnic-German civilians from Eastern Europe: “some fourteen million in all … driven from their homes … where their ancestors had lived for centuries …”
Short 🧵
"... perhaps as many as three million may have perished either as a result of outright massacre or from cold, hunger, and disease."
The horrific experience of an East Prussian woman was typical: Expelled from her home, and then robbed of food and clothing; traveling in train cars “littered with corpses.”
Years before the disaster of Forced Busing demolished Boston’s public school system, there were already warning signs of what was to come. The neighborhoods of Mattapan and Hyde Park got a preview of what “racial balance” integration would look like. It did not look promising. 🧵
In the mid-1960s Lewenberg Middle School in Boston's Mattapan neighborhood looked like an incredible success story. In addition to a stellar academic reputation, the school had also been one of the few in Boston to achieve some level of racial balance.
Attempting to appease civil rights complaints, Boston began allowing "open enrollment" transfers into Lewenberg in 1965, offering Black families a chance to attend the elite school. But as the racial balance tipped, alarmed parents saw standards declining, almost immediately.
Part II - Black-Jewish conflict in Boston as neighborhoods transitioned in the late 1960s. In April of 1968 Black radicals threatened to burn down the once-stately Mishkan Tefila temple complex unless it was turned over to the “Black community” free of charge.🧵
By the 1950s, most wealthy Jews had abandoned Boston for the suburbs, and the temple had been purchased by a Lubavitcher sect, who lacked funds to maintain it. They soon found themselves under siege in a neighborhood that was now overwhelmingly Black and increasingly hostile.
Some Jewish leaders hatched a plan to transfer the deteriorating temple complex to a Black community group led by Elma Lewis - hoping this might improve the increasingly strained relations between Boston’s Blacks and Jews.