In Defense of Kate Smith
[Reposted from August 8, 2020]
Those who vilify Kate Smith could not create one one-thousandth of the happiness that she imparted to her audiences. They can only destroy. Their goal is pure destruction: Of America and Christendom.
Orwell could not have dreamed of a better example of Thought Crime than the “racism” today’s arrogant young know-it-alls imagine they have “discovered” in songs composed decades before they were born. Fools, all of them. They play the role of useful idiots for Communist-trained agitators and provocateurs. Do not underestimate such people or their sponsors. They mean to destroy every vestige of American identity, heritage, and achievement.
***
ALAN writes:
It must have been in 1953 or ’54 that I first became aware of Kate Smith when my grandmother watched “The Kate Smith Hour” on afternoon television. I was four years old. Doubtless my grandmother remembered Kate Smith from her radio programs in the 1930s-‘40s.
The name Kate Smith never occurred in conversations in my family or among friends. There was no reason why it should. Throughout all the years when I grew up and afterwards, Kate Smith was “just there:” A part of American radio history, a frequent guest on television variety shows, a wonderful singer who came to be known as the “Songbird of the South,” an all-American patriot, and the woman whose 1938 recording of “God Bless America” was an inspiration for countless Americans.
It went without saying in my family that Kate Smith was all those things.
On many Sunday nights in the 1960s-‘70s, I listened to KXOK Radio in St. Louis because they played “oldies but goodies”. Kate Smith’s recording of “God Bless America” was played at the close of that program, which was also the end of their broadcast day. That is when and where I came fully to appreciate it. I remember the uplift I felt upon hearing that recording in the darkness of night, followed by silence when the station went off the air. It was a most effective setting for the recording to linger in my awareness for moments afterward and for me to think about it, as I did. I imagine my father and his Army Air Corps colleagues in the South Pacific during World War II must have been equally impressed if they were lucky enough to hear Kate Smith sing “God Bless America” on an Armed Forces Radio broadcast.
On hearing that recording in 1983, librarian Efrem Sepulveda wrote:
“I thought about how soaring it was to the spirit….and that it was something to remind us of the beauty we have lost…..”
[“Killing Kate Smith,” The Imaginative Conservative, May 20, 2019]
I agree, except for the word “lost.” I suggest Americans did not lose it but gave it away, through their gullibility, moral cowardice, and boundless capacity for self-immolation. (more…)
