Thứ Hai, 7 tháng 9, 2009


Number 589


The patriotic Yankee


Yankee Longago, who travels in time (as we saw in Pappy's #366), this time has a near-Bill Murray Groundhog Day experience, where he relives a day. He then steps into a war bonds poster and becomes part of the shooting war in Europe. In this morality tale by Dick "Frankenstein" Briefer our boy Yankee realizes he's not doing enough to help win the war. He's selfish, spending his savings on a bicycle instead of a war bond.

In 1944 terms the story made sense; in 2009 we think of the poor shopkeeper. He refunds Yankee's money, tells him he'll hold the bike and when Yankee saves more money he can buy it. Yankee says, "...when I save up another $18.75 I'll buy another bond." That was then, this is now. A consumer was then guilty of not spending money on bullets, as consumers today we are made to feel guilty for not spending our money on things we really don't need so we can "help the economy."

If the bicycle man was still in business when the war ended maybe Yankee got his bike. The story is from Boy Comics #18, October 1944.






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