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The John Batchelor Show

S8 Ep880: Testifying before Congress, Lindbergh challenges the administration's claim that technological advances make the United States more vulnerable to attack. He argues that air power actually enhances hemispheric defense by allowing the U.S. to intercept inva

The John Batchelor Show

John Batchelor

Arts, Books, News, Society & Culture

4.52.8K Ratings

🗓️ 17 May 2026

⏱️ 7 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Testifying before Congress, Lindbergh challenges the administration's claim that technological advances make the United States more vulnerable to attack. He argues that air power actually enhances hemispheric defense by allowing the U.S. to intercept invading forces far offshore. Rejecting the "isolationist" label, he proposes a robust defense of the Western Hemisphere rather than the Rhine River. Lindbergh continues to hold massive rallies, where he adopts sharper rhetoric against "interventionists" and "defeatists." However, he begins to realize he is outmatched by Roosevelt'ssuperior political maneuvering and control over the national conversation. (6/8)
1936

Transcript

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0:00.0

I'm John Batchew with Professor H.W. Brands, Bill Brands. America First is the book, Roosevelt versus

0:08.0

Lindbergh in The Shadow of War. This is like a drama, a play, in which the two principles

0:14.1

each can take the stage alternately, and they're playing often to the same foils, the same chorus.

0:22.7

This time it's Congress, before it was the American people.

0:26.6

The date I have is 1.1541.

0:32.1

Congressman Bloom invites Lindberg to testify to the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

0:39.6

The Senate within 24 or 48 hours, the same invitation. And at the end, there's applause as Lindberg stands up. He talks about

0:47.4

what needs to be done to defend America. We don't need to send troops to Europe. Professor, at this

0:54.1

point, I worried about Lindbergh.

0:57.7

He's in over his head.

0:59.0

Does he know it?

1:00.3

He's in over his head politically.

1:02.5

He's beginning to realize that Roosevelt is really good at politics, of making things in politics happen the way he wants them to happen.

1:16.2

Lindberg recognizes that he's a bit of a babe in the woods politically,

1:21.3

but he takes a certain pride in that very innocence or naivete because it means that he hasn't succumbed to the culture of

1:32.4

politics in the way Roosevelt has. So he likes to think of himself as this person who stands aside

1:38.6

and speaks the truth as he sees it without shading it in one direction or another. So that's the position

1:46.2

that he takes. Now, he still gets a hearing in Congress because there are still opponents of

1:53.3

Roosevelt. By this time, they're nearly all Republicans, and they have it against Roosevelt on

2:00.1

partisan grounds as well as on policy grounds.

2:03.0

And of course, in politics, it's always impossible to tease out entirely what's personal and what's political.

2:10.2

But they bring Lindberg forward not because of his views on politics, but because of his expertise on matters of air warfare.

...

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