True Comics #39
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeThis anthology issue contains multiple factual stories including "F.D.R." about the Democratic presidential candidate, a narrative about the Civilian Conservation Corps and National Youth Administration providing employment and training to young men in forestry work, and an account of sixteenth-century conflict between Spanish conquistadors and Mexican Indians, followed by discussion of nineteenth-century Japanese leaders and American naval expansion. The stories presented combine American political leadership, New Deal labor programs, and historical military encounters to illustrate themes of national progress and education.
During World War II, a fearless submarine rescues an Allied serviceman in perilous circumstances, proving that even in the darkest depths of wartime, hope and courage still prevail. This gripping true account captures a dramatic moment when quick thinking and bravery save a life against all odds.
This 1944 non-fiction story cuts through Nazi propaganda by showing that science proves all humans share the same anatomy and capability, regardless of race. Using historical examples—from ancient civilizations to Columbus and Marco Polo—it demonstrates how cultures have always learned from one another, and how education and circumstance shape beliefs far more than biology ever could. By tracing how leaders like Hitler, Mussolini, and Japanese militarists deliberately taught their people to feel superior through propaganda rather than fact, the story makes clear that the idea of "master races" is a dangerous lie built on indoctrination, not truth.
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Reprinted in There Are No Master Races #[nn] (1944), Red Goose Comic Selections #5 (1946), Special Agent #2 (1948)
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