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FunTranscript
00:00 [music]
00:18 The whole world is aflame.
00:20 All the peoples of the United Nations are fighting the savage enemies of freedom.
00:25 In many lands, towns are ravaged, countrysides laid waste by ruthless Axis hordes.
00:30 Farms, cattle, and crops have been destroyed.
00:33 Ruin, destitution, hunger, stalk the helpless victims of the cruel aggressor.
00:39 But in their darkest hour comes a light of hope, a light that must grow stronger and will grow stronger.
00:45 It is the hope of American agriculture.
00:48 Though this nation must fight to keep invaders from its own shores, its farmlands are abundant.
00:53 Greater even than the areas of Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Spain, Portugal, France, Switzerland, Great Britain, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Belgium, Holland, Yugoslavia, and Greece.
01:05 And spread over this vast land are the farmers, their wives, and their children.
01:10 Thirty million, twice as many as the Axis has soldiers.
01:15 Grim farmers with sleeves rolled up, ready for sacrifices.
01:19 These embattled farmers are armed.
01:22 Their weapons are the panzer forces of Food's Battle Line, farm machinery.
01:27 Battalions of combines, regiments of trucks, divisions of corn pickers, potato diggers, planting machines, columns of milking machines.
01:36 And all these machines kept in repair by farmers and their sons under the stress of war.
01:41 These farmers pouring out bumper crops to fill many a bare cupboard.
01:46 The farmer with his wheat crop for this year, 52 billion, 800 million pounds of wheat.
01:51 If all this wheat were made into flour, there'd be enough to snow under the entire German panzer army.
01:57 Looks to me like another Russian winter.
02:00 Or if all this flour had been baked into bread, there would be enough loaves to build an Egyptian pyramid, and another, and another, and another.
02:07 Placed a mile apart, they'd stretch the length of the Suez Canal.
02:11 Supposing this flour had been made into spaghetti.
02:14 Look at the sweater you could knit. Just a snug fit for old Mother Earth.
02:18 Corn, 2,850,000,000 bushels.
02:21 If all this were grown into one huge ear, it would make a bridge from London to the Black Sea.
02:27 And that hangs right over your head, Adolf.
02:30 Soybeans, 160,000,000 bushels.
02:33 Ground into flour, it would make a loaf that would fill Red Square in Moscow.
02:37 And it has double the nutritive value of meat.
02:40 Potatoes, 30 billion pounds. Just about twice as high as the Rock of Gibraltar.
02:45 Some potatoes.
02:47 Here we have the Matterhorn in Switzerland.
02:49 And this year's crop of tomatoes, 1,800,000,000 pounds.
02:54 Vegetables, all kinds of them.
02:56 There'd be enough to cover the wall of China.
02:58 One billion bushels of them.
03:00 Yes, and we're producing vitamins and food concentrates packed with enough power to bowl over the Axis nation.
03:06 That was vitamin X, boys.
03:09 Just to mark the spot.
03:11 Fruit juices, billions of gallons.
03:14 If pressed from our fruit crop of 35 billion pounds, there would be enough to keep old faithful Geyser gushing for nearly four months.
03:21 Or if all the fruit were made into one enormous pie, it would measure 25 miles in diameter.
03:27 My, what a time a pie thrower could have with that.
03:32 Milk, 125 billion pounds of it.
03:35 If all this flowed over Niagara Falls in a steady stream, it would generate enough electricity to light every factory in New York for one hour.
03:43 And besides, we'd have enough to give our children free milk with school lunches.
03:47 Or should we churn this milk into butter, war-flooded fields of Holland could be reclaimed by dykes it would build.
03:54 And if made into cheese, it would make a piece equivalent to this much of the moon.
03:59 Just imagine a fire made from four volcanoes the size of Vesuvius and a griddle 500 square miles in area.
04:06 That's what it would take to broil the 30 billion pounds of meat American farms are producing.
04:11 This little girl grown plump on a diet of our 11 billion pounds of fats and oils would outweigh 100 super dreadnoughts.
04:19 And what's more, she'd black out all of Berlin.
04:22 American hens are busy too, laying 50 billion eggs.
04:28 If all these were made into one huge fried egg, it would cover all the United States and Canada.
04:34 And don't forget we have enough bacon to go around it.
04:37 And here come the pigs, 100 million strong.
04:41 Just think of it, two pigs for every person in Great Britain and Ireland combined.
04:48 Who's afraid of the big bad wolf?
04:51 Not the farmer of the United States who works and sacrifices to fill the holds of victory ships.
04:56 Ships turned out by men and women working night and day.
04:59 Ships that must be fought through dark oceans where submarines lurk.
05:04 Ships guarded by aircraft, more and more of them.
05:07 Ships protected by the blasting fire of men of war.
05:12 Ships loaded with food for freedom, produced, fought through, and delivered to all who fight.
05:19 For the freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, freedom from fear.
05:27 Under this insignia is shipped food that will win the war.
05:34 [Music]
05:40 [BLANK_AUDIO]