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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDr. Seuss: “This mess is so big & so deep & so tall-We cannot pick it up-There is no way at all!”
When Dr. Seuss Took on Adolf HitlerJAN 15 2013, 9:00 AM ET 2
The children's author drew more than 400 fantastical political cartoons in the early years of World War II.







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http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2013/01/when-dr-seuss-took-on-adolf-hitler/267151/#slide1
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Dr. Seuss: “This mess is so big & so deep & so tall-We cannot pick it up-There is no way at all!” (Original Post)
kpete
Jan 2013
OP
abelenkpe
(9,933 posts)1. K&R nt
sinkingfeeling
(56,555 posts)2. The first one could be used today.
Xithras
(16,191 posts)3. A quick note about that last one, and his anti-Japanese American cartoons.
Geisel, like many Americans, got caught up in the anti-Nisei hysteria and published a number of cartoons supporting their internment and painting them as traitors. That's an odd position, as he was otherwise a left-liberal who strongly opposed racism, but it was an echo of the era he lived in.
Geisel later regretted the cartoons and apologized for writing them. He then went a step further...Horton Hears a Who was written as an allegory about the Japanese occupation and the need to protect Japanese civilians, was originally dedicated to a Japanese friend, as was intended as an apology for his previous anti-Japanese sentiment.