Charles Lindbergh — "The greatest lesson I have learned in life is that we are all connected. We are …"
The greatest lesson I have learned in life is that we are all connected. We are all part of something larger than ourselves.
The greatest lesson I have learned in life is that we are all connected. We are all part of something larger than ourselves.
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"The human race is a single race, and it is a wonderful one, but it is not a uniform race. There are differences, and these differences are important. They are important for the future of the race."
"I believe that the white race is the superior race, and we must maintain our purity."
"We are facing a grave emergency. We are being drawn into a war that is not our war."
"We must never lose sight of the fact that we are all human beings, and we all have a responsibility to each other."
"The future of civilization depends on the survival of the white race."
American aviator who completed the first solo nonstop transatlantic flight (Spirit of St. Louis, May 1927) and later led the isolationist America First Committee against US entry into WWII. Closely associated with Amelia Earhart (aviation contemporary). For an intellectual contrast, see Franklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd US President — FDR's interventionist Lend-Lease policy and 1941 declaration of war ended Lindbergh's America First isolationism; FDR publicly questioned Lindbergh's loyalty in April 1941, leading Lindbergh to resign his Air Corps Reserve commission. The cleanest 'interventionist president vs celebrity-isolationist' pairing in 20th-century US politics.
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