SWANSON, David. US author & journalist exposes extraordinary Mainstream media lying by omission over the secret Anglo-American push for war against Japan in WW2

David Swanson (author, activist, journalist, radio host, director of WorldBeyondWar.org , campaign coordinator for RootsAction.org and author of “War is a Lie”) suggests 7 December as Golden Age Day after Gore Vidal’s novel “The Golden Age” that describes the secret Anglo-American push for war against Japan in WW2: “Golden Age Day should include public readings of Vidal's novel and the glowing endorsements of it by the Washington Post, New York Times Book Review, and every other corporate paper in the year 2000, also known as the year 1 BWT (before the war on terra). Not a single one of those newspapers has ever, to my knowledge, printed a serious straightforward analysis of how President Franklin D. Roosevelt maneuvered the United States into World War II

In The Golden Age [by Gore Vidal] , we follow along inside all the closed doors, as the British push for U.S. involvement in World War II, as President Roosevelt makes a commitment to Prime Minister Winston Churchill, as the warmongers manipulate the Republican convention to make sure that both parties nominate candidates in 1940 ready to campaign on peace while planning war, as FDR longs to run for an unprecedented third term as a wartime president but must content himself with beginning a draft and campaigning as a drafttime president in a time of supposed national danger, and as FDR works to provoke Japan into attacking on his desired schedule. …

Joseph Rochefort, cofounder of the Navy's communication intelligence section, who was instrumental in failing to communicate to Pearl Harbor what was coming, would later comment: "It was a pretty cheap price to pay for unifying the country." The night after the attack, President Roosevelt had CBS News's Edward R. Murrow and Roosevelt's Coordinator of Information William Donovan over for dinner at the White House, and all the President wanted to know was whether the American people would now accept war. Donovan and Murrow assured him the people would indeed accept war now. Donovan later told his assistant that Roosevelt's surprise was not that of others around him, and that he, Roosevelt, welcomed the attack. Murrow was unable to sleep that night and was plagued for the rest of his life by what he called "the biggest story of my life" which he never told. Have a Meaningful Golden Age Day!” (see David Swanson, “Golden Age of Pearl Harbor”, Countercurrents, 6 December, 2014: http://www.countercurrents.org/swanson061214.htm ).