Showing posts with label cartoons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cartoons. Show all posts

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Some images to better understand Fascist Italy

Here you have some photographs, propaganda posters and cartoons about Italian Fascism. With them you will be able to learn some of the main characteristisc of the Italian totalitarian State: constant use of propaganda, cult of Mussolini´s personality, aggressive foreign policy, attempt of rebuilding the Roman Empire




One of the most meaningful Fascist slogans


Believe, obey, fight


One single heart, one single will, one single decision


A wall with the slogan "Mussolini is always right"



Electoral propaganda posters  at Palazzo Braschi, Mussolini´s political headquarters. The first image belongs to 1929 and the second one to 1934. The Fascist Party was the only allowed, but there were plebiscites to confirm Mussolini´s leadership from time to time.


Dictators (politicians in general) love children

This cartoon criticised the use of poison gas in the Italian invasion of Ethiopia. 



Mussolini as the Emperor of Africa

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Bailed out?




Today the Eurogroup (the Ministers of Economy and Finance of the countries that use the Euro as currency) has announced an economic loan of up to 100,000 million € to the Spanish government, so that the Spanish financial system can "clean" the huge debts the banks have since the crash of the real estate bubble in 2008. The loan will be at low interest rate and will arrive in Spain through the EFSF (European Financial Stability Facility) and the ESM (European Stability Mechanism), emergency institutions created to help the EU countries with financial problems. The Spanish FROB (Fund for Orderly Bank Restructuring) will receive the funds and lend them at very low interest rate to the banks which need to "recapitalize" and the Spanish government will be the final responsible for this help and the use the banks give to the money. But is this a bailout? Is this something similar to what happened to Greece, Ireland and Portugal?

- The bailouts provided to Greece, Ireland and Portugal were mainly focused on reducing the State debts and included a lot of instructions to do it: reduction of the retirement pensions and civil servants´ salaries, increase of the VAT and other taxes, dismissals of public workers...


- The amount of money Spain is going to receive is similar to the bailouts received by Greece, Ireland and Portugal: 
  • Greece received 110,000 million € in May 2010 and 109,000 additional million € in July 2011. 
  • Ireland received 85,000 million € in November 2010
  • Portugal got 87,000 million € in May 2011.



- Apparently, the bailout to Spain doesn´t include additional conditions for the Spanish government, because the economic help has been presented as an injection of capital to the banks in trouble. It seems that the Eurogroup has decided to test a different solution for Spain, the 4th economy of the Eurozone and considered to be "too big to fail". The Eurogroup might have decided changing strategy and lending money to the banks directly and not to the country. This means that the banks would be the ones to fulfill the conditions imposed by the Eurogroup, not the Spanish government. 







We should wait some days to realize the real implications of this bailout they don´t want to define as such. But if we look back, we´ll see that when the economic crisis started in 2007 and the USA banks had problems in 2008, the Federal Reserve bailed them out with 700,000 million dollars. The USA started its recovery first. The European Union decided to follow a different way: austerity and deficit control above all. This policy has brought a lot of cuts, the biggest attack to the Welfare State up to date, hundreds of thousands of unemployed... As we can see, the people who are in charge of the governments don´t want to learn from the past. Or maybe they forget about the parts of history that don´t fit with their plans?

Eurogroup statement on Spain: 

http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/en/ecofin/130778.pdf

And here you have a complete report about Spain´s situation prepared by the BBC website. It includes graphs and a questions and answers´section:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-18338616

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-17549970


Tuesday, June 5, 2012

The New Deal alphabet soup of agencies and laws

AAA, SEC, PWA, NIRA, SSA, TVA and so on. During the 1930s Franklin Delano Roosevelt´s federal government created a lot of national agencies to carry out the New Deal programs. Over 30 new agencies were created to put federal programs in practice. Here you have some cartoons about the New Deal remedies: 

Roosevelt: "Of course we may try to change remedies if we don´t get results"



Roosevelt to Uncle Sam on 1933 Christmas´ Eve: "Uncle, I´m surely expecting something!"

All these agencies and programs were abbreviated with the use of several acronyms and were known as the Alphabet Soup. On this cartoon we can see that even Albert Einstein had difficulties to understand this letter soup: 


Einstein to Roosevelt: "It´s very perplexing. Relativity is so simple by comparison!"

On this link you have a list of the most used New Deal Acronyms: 


And here you have some more information about the Top Ten New Deal Programs: 


Many of the agencies created during the New Deal years still exist. Here you have a report about them: 


The New Deal programs mobilized 64,000 million dollars, reduced poverty and created a lot of jobs, but some groups in the USA considered Roosevelt´s programs as a step forward towards centrally planned economy  and socialism and went to the Supreme Court of Justice to oppose these this programs. This cartoon reflects this opinion: 


On the right in the background we can observe Stalin saying "How red the sunrise is getting!".
On the left in the foreground we can read the interpretation the critics made of the New Deal spending program. 



And this is another cartoon where Roosevelt denied that his program was revolutionary:



The Supreme Court of Justice declared some of the New Deal laws unconstitutional. Here you have a list of them and the reasons why they were considered to be unconstitutional: 


Thursday, May 31, 2012

Some cartoons about the Great Depression during Hoover´s presidency

Yesterday we studied that the USA government followed the liberal othodoxy at the beginning of the economic crisis. They expected that the "invisible hand of the market" would solve the problems without any political intervention. But the evidence showed that things wouldn´t work if reforms were not done. President Hoover's government followed a deflationist policy, increased tariffs to protect the USA production and started some emergency programs to help the poor, but the intervention of the government in economy didn´t start until Franklin D. Roosevelt started ruling in March 1933. 

Here you have some political cartoons about the Great Depression during Hoover´s presidency: 

















Friday, March 30, 2012

A very simple, but complete drawn version of WW1



Causes of World War One


Yesterday I found this comic version of World War One, drawn by Angus McLeod. It explains everything about the Great War: the outbreak, the stages, the main battles and the end of war. Click on the link to read it: 




Click on the link if you want to read it and see all the details: 


Angus McLeod has also a drawn version of WW2:

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

The way to war in some cartoons

Today we have seen some meaningful cartoons about the increasing tension in the first decades of the 20th century in Europe. Here you have some more: 


This is the cover of the French magazine Le Petit Journal Illustré. The cartoonist represented the unstoppable collapse of the Ottoman Empire  in 1908, when Austria-Hungary annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina and Russia won influence at the Balkans after the independence of Bulgaria. The Austro-Hungarian Emperor and the Russian Tsar were represented seizing parts of the Balkans before the Ottoman Emperor´s impotence. 



The Eastern Question´s Wake-up, Le Petit Journal Illustré, 18th October 1908




This is a cartoon of the beginning of October 1912, appeared on Punch, a British satirical magazine. The main  European powers were represented over the pot, trying to content the Balkan troubles.




The boiling point, Punch, 2nd October 1912


Finally war started and the Balkan League (Bulgaria, Greece, Montenegro and Serbia) declared war to the Ottoman Empire. The following cartoon comes from a German magazine called Simplicissimus and it represents the British lion, the two-headed Austro-Hungarian eagle, the French Gallic rooster, the Russian bear and the German eagle trying to stop the fire of war at the Balkans after the outbreak of the First Balkan War.




"Unfortunately the united European fire brigade was unable to stop the fire"
Simplicissimus, 28th October 1912


And this last cartoon was published by The Chicago Tribune in August 1914, a little after the outbreak of the war. It´s called "The Crime of the Ages- Who did it?". Every country involved at war is represented as a soldier and all of them are pointing with their swords at the ones they consider responsible for the outbreak. Only Italy kept out of war.


The Crime of the Ages-Who did it?, 5th August 1914

Friday, March 16, 2012

The Spanish American War in some cartoons

The loss of the last Spanish colonies in America and Asia was a consequence of the Spanish American War, a conflict which meant the end of an empire (Spain) and the rise of another one (the USA). This war had an important reflection on newspapers. Experts consider the Spanish-American War to be the first "media war". This conflict was widely covered by the USA newspapers. The press barons Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst, had an important role in the development of the conflict. The way they presented the news contributed to inflame the public opinion in the USA and created the propitious conditions for war. Their newspapers, The New York World and The New York Journalcompeted in sensationalism and are considered to be some of the first examples of yellow journalism. 

Here you have some examples: 



Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst dressed as the Yellow Kid, preparing war: 



Cuba as a suffering mother


President McKinley as a coward



President McKinley trying to contain war pressure:



Remember the Maine 


The Spanish brute: 


Spain out!


Uncle Sam versus the Spanish matador:


The duello


Uncle Sam taking the Spanish bull by the horns



Alphonse of Bourbon, future Alphonse XIII, offering the peace cigarette to Uncle Sam



President McKinley offering Uncle Sam different "dishes"




Uncle Sam Fishing


Uncle Sam balancing his new possessions



The bald eagle extending its wings over the new empire: 



Anti-Imperialist cartoon, criticizing the new responsibilities acquired after the war: 


Before and after 

In Spain the war and its consequences caused a strong impact on the population. The cartoons of that period offer the possibility of knowing the different opinions about the conflict in the country and the evolution of the public opinion: the initial nationalist exaltation of the official dynastic newspapers, the criticism of the opposition parties (the republicans considered the war to be an imperialist conflict and a slaughter for the popular classes), the resignation after the defeat and the search for responsibilities. 


General Weyler, in charge of repressing the Cuban insurrection. The republican Catalan magazine 
La Campana de Gràcia criticized his incompetence



General Weyler riding a snail. The campaign in Cuba advancing slowly. 


The USA sugarcane union feeding the pig of the Cuban insurrection: 


Cuba represented as a pig, feeding the rebels: 



Cuba is going to get lost, La Campana de Gràcia



Crucify her!
Uncle Sam-Herod asking the Cuban rebels what to do with Spain-Jesuschrist. This cartoon was published on Madrid Cómico




Uncle Sam´s ambition:




Christopher Columbus complaining about what the Spaniards did with his legacy: 



The signature of Peace of Paris, where Spain lost its colonial empire




The cartoon above reflects the missionaries coming back to Spain after the loss of the Philippines. The cartoon shows the contrast between the need for regeneration of the country and the origin of the repatriated (members of the Church and representatives of tradition and backwardness).




Banquet at the County Tennis Court, Cu-cut

This last cartoon created a strong controversy. It was published on November 1905 in the Catalan  satirical magazine Cu-cut! It criticized the role of the Spanish Army in the loss of the colonies. The military considered the cartoon very offensive and a group of them attacked the offices of the Cu-Cut and La Veu de Catalunya, another Catalan newspaper. King Alphonse XIII refused to punish the military men who had attacked the newspapers. As a result of this, Eugenio Montero Ríos, the prime minister, resigned. The new prime minister, Segismundo Moret, promoted the approval of the Law of Jurisdiction, which gave to the Army the power of judging crimes related with the flag, the nation and the honour of the military. This law limited the freedom of the press.