Authors: Philip Roth
Elsinore from the yoke of foreign domination, the
American people are going to be assailed by
counsels of defeat and doubt from some of the
most widely known opinion leaders of the nation.
But let me say this to those defeatists and doubters:
should the state of Denmark, now or in the future,
attempt to occupy Mark Twain's Missouri, or the
wonderful old South of Gone
with the Wind,
in the
way that they have so ruthlessly occupied "Hamlet's
Castle" all these centuries, I would no more hesitate
to send in the Marines to free Hannibal and Atlanta
and Richmond and Jackson and St. Louis, than I did
tonight to free Elsinore. And I firmly believe that
the great majority of the American people would
stand behind me then, as I know they do now.
Fortunately, however, I now have every expectation
that not only our children, but our
children's children, will never have to defend with
their blood the literary landmarks of their native
land from the onslaught of the Danish Tourist
Office, because we, their parents, failed to do our
duty by them in a quaint little seaside village in a
faraway land.
The next move is up to Copenhagen. They have
two choices. Either they can extend to us the
diplomatic courtesy we have requested of them
under international law; or, in the face of that
request, they can continue to display the
intransigence, belligerence and contempt that
originally touched off this grave confrontation.
Now if they choose within the next twelve hours
to negotiate with us in good faith by
conceding to us what we want, I shall immediately
call off the blockade of their coast, just as
John F. Charisma called off the blockade of
Cuba in his finest hour. Furthermore, I will reduce
at the rate of one sixteenth a year the
number of troops massed at their borders. Lastly,
TRICKY ADDRESSES THE NATION
the guard taken prisoner at Elsinore castle will be
returned to Copenhagen, provided the interrogation
now being conducted does not reveal him to be a
Danish citizen in the employ of the Danish
government.
If, however, Copenhagen should refuse to negotiate
in good faith by giving us what we want, I
shall immediately order 100,000 armed American
troops onto Danish soil.
Now, quickly, let me make one thing very clear:
this will not constitute an invasion, either. Once we
have overrun the country, bombarded the major
cities, devastated the countryside, destroyed the
military, disarmed the citizenry, jailed the leaders of
the Pro-Pornography government, and established
in Copenhagen the government currently in exile so
that, as Abraham Lincoln said, it shall not perish
from this earth, we shall immediately withdraw our
troops.
For unlike the Danes, this great country harbors
no designs on foreign territory. Nor do we wish to
interfere in the internal affairs of another country.
Despite our very deep sympathy with the aspirations
of the Danish Anti-Pornography Resistance, we
have over the years maintained a scrupulous waitand-
see attitude, in the hope that these eminently
decent and idealistic men of the D.A.R. would be
permitted to achieve political office in Copenhagen
through democratic means. Unfortunately, the Pro-
Pornography Party
96
OUR GANG
would not permit this to come about, but repeatedly,
in one so-called free election after another,
chose to brainwash the Danish people in voting
against the D.A.R. So elaborate and thoroughgoing
were these brainwashing techniques, that eventually
the D.A.R. did not collect a single vote and, to all
intents and purposes, might just as well not have
been on the ballot. In this way did the forces of filth
and smut make a mockery of the democratic
processes in Denmark.
My fellow Americans, it is precisely this sort of
contempt for the rights of others that Copenhagen
would now display toward the United States of
America. Only this country is not about to be
bullied and disgraced by a tenth-rate military power,
and see our credibility destroyed in every area of the
world where only the power of the United States
deters aggression. And that is why tonight I have
put the leaders in Copenhagen on notice that if they
continue to refuse what we ask them, I will bring all
our military might to bear to restore to legitimate
authority in Denmark a government that will
respond to reason instead of force, a government
that stands for decency instead of degradation, a
government, as Abraham Lincoln said, of, by and
for, not only the Danish people, but the American
people and all good people everywhere.
What are we asking of Copenhagen, my fel
TRICKY ADDRESSES THE NATION
97
low Americans? Neither more nor less than what
we requested and received from the United
Kingdom in 1968, when, according to the rules of
international law and the custom of civilized
nations, that country returned to our shores the
fugitive from justice who was later convicted of the
murder of Martin Luther King.
What are we asking of Copenhagen? Neither
more nor less than what we would have requested
of the Soviet Union in 1963, had President
Charisma's murderer attempted to take refuge for a
second time in that country.
What are we asking of Copenhagen? Nothing
more nor less than that they surrender to the proper
American authorities the fugitive from the
Washington Senators of the American League of
Professional Baseball Clubs, the man who fled this
country on April 27, 1971, exactly one week to the
day before the uprising of the Boy Scouts in
Washington-the man named Charles
Curtis Flood.
Now events have moved so rapidly during these
past twenty-four hours that in the interest of clarity
I should like to review for you in all its pertinent
details, the case of Charles Curtis Flood, who,
previous to his disappearance, played baseball right
here in Washington, under the alias "Curt Flood."
As always, I want to make everything as per
perfectly clear
to you as I can
.
That is why you hear
me say over
and over again, in my speeches and
press conferences
and interviews, that I want to
make one thing very clear, or two things, or
three things, or as many things as I have on my
agenda to make very clear. To give you a little
glimpse of the lighter side of the President's life
(impish
endearing smile), my wife tells me that I
even say it
in
my dreams. (Back to business) My
fellow Americans, I am confident that you recognize
as well as I do, that any man who says he wants to
make things perfectly clear as often as
I
do, both
awake and in his sleep, obviously does not have
anything to hide.
Now who is this man who calls himself "Curt
Flood"? To many Americans, particularly the
wonderful mothers of our land, that name is
probably as strange as the name Eric Starvo Galt,
which, you may remember, was the alias taken by
James Earl Ray, the convicted murder
er
of Martin
Luther King.
Who is "Curt Flood"? Well, until a year or so
ago, the answer would have been simple enough.
Flood was a baseball player for the St. Louis
Cardinals of the National League, a center fielder
with a more than respectable lifetime batting
average of .294. Not a Hall of Famer, not the best
baseball player in the big leagues, but far from the
worst. Many even believed that his finest years lay
ahead of him. I am proud to say
TRICKY ADDRESSES THE NATION
99
that I, as an avid fan of baseball as well as all manly
sports, was among them.
Then tragedy struck. In
1970,
with
no more
warning than the Japanese gave at Pearl Harbor,
"Curt Flood," as he then called himself, turned
upon the very sport that had made him one of the
highest-paid Negroes in the history of
our country. In
1970,
he announced-and this is
an exact quotation from his own writings-
"Somebody needs to go up against the system," and
proceeded to bring a legal action against Organized
Baseball. According to the Commissioner of
Baseball himself, this action would destroy the game
of baseball as we know it, if Flood were to emerge
victorious.
Now no one expects ordinary citizens, who earn
their livelihoods outside the legal profession, to be
able to wade through the intricacies of a legal suit
such as this fugitive from justice has brought
against our great national pastime for the purpose
of destroying it. That's why people hire lawyers in
the first place. I know when I was a lawyer that was
why people hired me, and
I think without boasting, that I was able to help
them. When I was a young, struggling lawyer,
and Pitter and I were living on nine dollars a
week out in Prissier, California, which is right
here (points), I would read through my law
books and study long into the night
in
order to
help my clients, most of whom were wonderful
100
young people just like Pitter and myself. At that
time, by the way, I had the following debts
outstanding:
-$1,000 on our neat little house.
-$200
to my dear parents.
-$110 to my loyal and devoted brother.
-$15 to our fine dentist, a warm-hearted Jew
ish man for whom we had the greatest re
spect.
-$4.35 to our kindly grocer, an old Italian who
always had a good word for everybody. I still
remember his name. Tony.
-75 cents to our Chinese laundryman, a slightlybuilt
fellow who nonetheless worked long into
the night over his shirts, just as I did over my
lawbooks, so that his children might one day
attend the college of their choice. I am sure
they have grown up to be fine and outstanding
Chinese-Americans.
-6o cents to the Polish man, or Polack, as the
Vice President would affectionately call him,
who delivered the ice for our old-fashioned
icebox. He was a strong man with great pride