1. had been responsible for all the good things that we now enjoy; he believed in the supreme value of intellectual leadership, in the wisdom of the chosen few; he was interested in showing how narrow was the circle of kinship from which the great British leaders in statesmanship and thinking had been drawn; and he was an intense lover of his country?. He was not a Socialist. His regard for the middleclass, for artists, scientists and brain workers of all kinds made him dislike the class-conscious elements of Socialism. He had no egalitarian sentiment; if he wanted to improve the lot of the poor?that was not for the sake of equality;He valued institutions which had historic roots in the country; he was a great upholder of the virtues of the middle-class which, in his view
2. Keynes, Roosevelt, and the Complementary Revolutions
3. How Keynes Came to America;John Kenneth Galbraith;Challenge,1975
4. Many right-wingers continue to argue that the New Deal epitomized an extreme leftist approach to the economy: for example;Dudley Dillard;Prejudice, and Politics: Roosevelt versus Recovery,1946