76-12-A4

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Panama[edit]

Transcript[edit]

In the next few months, we're going to be treated to a sophisticated public relation's campaign designed to convince us we really want to give away the Panama Canal. The government of Panama has hired an American public relations firm, headquartered in Washington, to do a nationwide sales job on the American people. The fee is some where between 150,000 and 200,00 dollars for a six month's campaign, which should buy a fair-sized snow job.

It is interesting to note that the firm selected by the Panamanian government is one experienced in matters political. The owner is reported to be former Democratic National Chairman Strauss, but the political spectrum is pretty well covered. Former Goldwater campaigner and participant on the Republican side in the last campaign, F. Clifton White, will be among those running the operation.

No one, of course, can know in advance what the advertising theme will be. Could be the Canal is obsolete and unimportant; or it is a last vestige of colonialism. Then of course, there is the ever-present threat the enraged Panamanians will rise up and do violence to us and the Canal. Any, or all, of these could be the basis for the sales campaign. And all of them are as phony as some of the old-time Hollywood publicity used to glorify not-so-epic screen epics. We can be a little more sure of what they won't tell us. There will be no mention of the fact that General Torrijos, Panama's dictator, was not chosen by the people. He was part of a junta that seized power at the point of a gun nine years ago. No reference will be made to the amount of shipping going through the canal each day, and how much prices would go up if those ships had to go 'round the "horn". Or, how much prices would go up if someone like the General, instead of non-profit Uncle Sam, were setting the toll fees.

We've already been conditioned to accept that Panamanians are at a boiling point over this issue, so I'm sure the public relations campaign will make no mention of the stories Ronald Yates of the Chicago TRIBUNE has been filing from Panama City. Yates has found that Torrijos is not an object of affection in Panama, and the poor and unemployed want desperately for us to stay in control of the Canal. A number of our congressmen and senators have heard the same thing from businessmen and Panamanian leaders, but they only express themselves in whispers. Mr. Yates found that those with little to lose (except their lives) were bolder. Singly, in groups, and freely giving their names they are quoted as saying, -- QUOTE -- "All of us would fight for America to keep the Canal. We would never fight against the United States." -- UNQUOTE. The one who said that also said, -- QUOTE -- "The only people in Panama who have ever given the United States trouble are communists, rich University students, and parasitic intellectuals who live off the blood and sweat of people like us." -- UNQUOTE. Another said, -- QUOTE -- "Running the Canal is a complex thing. As soon as the Panamanian government gets its hands on the controls, forget about the Canal as a means of getting ships between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans." -- UNQUOTE. His friends tried to persuade him not to talk because he would be taken away by the police. He shrugged them off and said, -- QUOTE -- "The Americans are the only friends we've got. Poor people don't have nobody else." -- UNQUOTE. An old woman summed it up when she told the TRIBUNE reporter, -- QUOTE -- "You ask the General how he got so rich in eight years." -- UNQUOTE.

This is Ronald Reagan.

Thanks for listening.

 

Details[edit]

Batch Number76-12-A4
Production Date04/13/1977
Book/PageRPtV-143
Audio
Youtube?No

Added Notes[edit]