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Radio Address By Franklin D. Roosevelt, February 18, 1931 |
| CREATOR: |
Franklin D. Roosevelt (author) |
| DATE: |
February 18, 1931 |
| SOURCE: |
New Deal Network (www.newdeal.feri.org) |
Page 1: | | | | 1 |
I believe it was announced that I was going to talk today on why it
pays to do things for crippled children and, I might add to that,
other kinds of cripples--grown-up cripples as well. I want to talk, of
course, about the big human side of relieving distress and helping
people to get on their feet, but at the same time I think there is
another phase of the broad question of looking after cripples to which
some people have never given much thought--the financial side. For
instance, I am told that there are somewhere between three and four
hundred thousand cripples in this country today--I mean cripples who
are pretty thoroughly put out of business, who cannot get around, who
cannot perform any useful task--people, in other words, most of them
children, who have to be looked after by other people. Think of it,
three or four hundred thousand people out of our total population.
This is a tremendous percentage.
| | | | 2 |
Now let us figure for a minute in simple terms. Suppose for the sake
of argument that three hundred thousand people are out of useful work
when they grow to be older and that each one of them, if he could
work, could produce one thousand dollars' worth of new products every
year. In other words, if the productive value were one thousand
dollars a year apiece, three hundred thousand of them would mean three
hundred million dollars added to the annual productive capacity of the
United States. That is worth thinking about from the purely money end
of things. If we could restore every cripple in this country to some
kind of useful occupation it would do much to help the general wealth
and well-being of the United States.
| | | | 3 |
People know well that restoring one of us cripples--because as some of
you know, I walk around with a cane and with the aid of somebody's arm
myself--to useful occupation costs money. Being crippled is not like
many other diseases, contagious and otherwise, where the cure can be
made in a comparatively short time; not like the medical operation
where one goes to the hospital and at the end of a few weeks goes out
made over again and ready to resume life. People who are crippled take
a long time to be put back on their feet--sometimes years, as we all
know. Take it from that angle. Suppose for the sake of argument it
costs one thousand dollars a year for a crippled child to be put back
on his feet and that it takes five years to do it. The cost to the
community--because it has to be community effort in most cases, for
most families cannot afford it--is five thousand dollars to put that
one individual back on his feet. Remember that most of the cripples
can in some shape, manner or form be brought back to useful life.
Suppose they are brought back so that at the time they are 20 or 21
they have before them the expectation of a long and useful life,
perhaps at least 40 years more. During those 40 years each one of them
ought to be able to earn one thousand dollars a year. There is forty
thousand dollars added to the country's wealth, at a cost of only five
thousand dollars. So the net saving or profit to the State or country
as a whole is thirty-five thousand dollars. That shows it pays from
the money point of view, if from no other.
| | | | 4 |
At the present time in the United States, they tell me, there are
about thirty thousand new cases every year of people who become
crippled for one reason or another. The first thing we are trying to
do everywhere is to cut down that number of new cases; and I have a
letter from my old friend Daddy Allen, whom a great many people all
over the United States know as the man who started the International
Society for Crippled Children which has branches in every civilized
country of the world. He tells me that work is going on in every State
in this Union to prevent people from getting crippled, and he hopes
that as a result, within a short time, instead of having thirty
thousand cases, we shall be able to cut it down to 20,000. It would be
a tremendous saving if by preventive measures we can keep ten thousand
children every year from becoming crippled.
| | | | 5 |
Of course, modern medical science is trying to prevent diseases and
troubles of all kinds just as much as it is trying to make cures. This
calls for better understanding on the part of the people, for better
education on the part especially of the parents, for better conditions
surrounding the birth of children, better care in the home, and,
equally important, prevention of many unnecessary accidents of all
kinds--automobile accidents, train accidents, and so on. So the first
step is to work for the prevention of crippling. This covers the great
advances that have been made in preventing industrial accidents--
unnecessary injuries that come to people who are at work not only in
factories, but also in the field, in nearly every State of the Union.
The United States now is working hard and spending much money to
prevent these industrial accidents. They are far too common, but much
has been accomplished and more will be accomplished in the years to
come.
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