Primary Sources from the Interwar Neutrality Debate
Cartoonist Criticizes Neutrality 1935
Context: Although the idea of neutrality enjoyed broad public support in 1935, not everyone in the United States believed the country could simply legislate its way out of conflicts. Critics argued that the United States already had extensive commercial interests abroad that could draw the country into conflict whether it wished to remain neutral or not. Some of the sharpest commentary on neutrality at the time came from political cartoonists.
To access the original "No foreign entanglements" political cartoon, visit the Library of Congress.