POINT
OF VIEW
The
Infamous Kitchen Debate, 50 Years Later...
[Both men enter kitchen in the American exhibit.] Nixon: I want
to show you this kitchen. It is like those of our houses in California.
[Nixon points to dishwasher.] Khrushchev: We have such things.
Nixon: This is our newest model. This is the kind which is built
in thousands of units for direct installations in the houses.
In America, we like to make life easier for women... Khrushchev:
Your capitalistic attitude toward women does not occur under Communism.
Nixon: I think that this attitude towards women is universal.
What we want to do, is make life more easy for our housewives...
Nixon: This house can be bought for $14,000, and most American
[veterans from World War II] can buy a home in the bracket of
$10,000 to $15,000. Let me give you an example that you can appreciate.
Our steel workers as you know, are now on strike. But any steel
worker could buy this house. They earn $3 an hour. This house
costs about $100 a month to buy on a contract running 25 to 30
years. Khrushchev: We have steel workers and peasants who can
afford to spend $14,000 for a house. Your American houses are
built to last only 20 years so builders could sell new houses
at the end. We build firmly. We build for our children and grandchildren.
Nixon: American houses last for more than 20 years, but, even
so, after twenty years, many Americans want a new house or a new
kitchen. Their kitchen is obsolete by that time....The American
system is designed to take advantage of new inventions and new
techniques. Khrushchev: This theory does not hold water. Some
things never get out of date—houses, for instance, and furniture,
furnishings—perhaps—but not houses. I have read much
about America and American houses, and I do not think that this
is exhibit and what you say is strictly accurate. Nixon: Well,
um... Khrushchev: I hope I have not insulted you. Nixon: I have
been insulted by experts. Everything we say [on the other hand]
is in good humor. Always speak frankly. Khrushchev: The Americans
have created their own image of the Soviet man. But he is not
as you think. You think the Russian people will be dumbfounded
to see these things, but the fact is that newly built Russian
houses have all this equipment right now. Nixon: Yes, but... Khrushchev:
In Russia, all you have to do to get a house is to be born in
the Soviet Union. You are entitled to housing...In America, if
you don’t have a dollar you have a right to choose between
sleeping in a house or on the pavement. Yet you say we are the
slave to Communism. Nixon: I appreciate that you are very articulate
and energetic... Khrushchev: Energetic is not the same thing as
wise. Nixon: If you were in the Senate, we would call you a filibusterer!
You—[Khrushchev interrupts]—do all the talking and
don’t let anyone else talk. This exhibit was not designed
to astound but to interest. Diversity, the right to choose, the
fact that we have 1,000 builders building 1,000 different houses
is the most important thing. We don’t have one decision
made at the top by one government official. This is the difference.
Khrushchev: On politics, we will never agree with you. For instance,
Mikoyan likes very peppery soup. I do not. But this does not mean
that we do not get along. Nixon: You can learn from us, and we
can learn from you. There must be a free exchange. Let the people
choose the kind of house, the kind of soup, the kind of ideas
that they want. Khrushchev: [In jest] You look very angry, as
if you want to fight me. Are you still angry? Nixon: [in jest]
That’s right! Other Russian speaker: Tell us, please, what
are your general impressions of the exhibit? Khrushchev: It’s
clear to me that the construction workers didn’t manage
to finish their work and the exhibit still is not put in order...This
is what America is capable of, and how long has she existed? 300
years? 150 years of independence and this is her level. We haven’t
quite reached 42 years, and in another 7 years, we’ll be
at the level of America, and after that we’ll go farther.
As we pass you by, we’ll wave “hi” to you, and
then if you want, we’ll stop and say, “please come
along behind us.” ...If you want to live under capitalism,
go ahead, that’s your question, an internal matter, it doesn’t
concern us. We can feel sorry for you, but really, you wouldn’t
understand. We’ve already seen how you understand things.
Other U.S speaker: Mr. Vice President, from what you have seen
of our exhibition, how do you think it’s going to impress
the people of the Soviet Union? Nixon: It’s a very effective
exhibit, and it’s one that will cause a great deal of interest.
I might say that this morning I, very early in the morning, went
down to visit a market, where the farmers from various outskirts
of the city bring in their items to sell. I can only say that
there was a great deal of interest among these people, who were
workers and farmers, etc... I would imagine that the exhibition
from that standpoint would, therefore, be a considerable success.
As far as Mr Khrushchev’s comments just now, they are in
the tradition we learned to expect from him of speaking extemporaneously
and frankly whenever he has an opportunity. I can only say that
if this competition which you have described so effectively, in
which you plan to outstrip us, particularly in the production
of consumer goods...If this competition is to do the best for
both of our peoples and for people everywhere, there must be a
free exchange of ideas. There are some instances where you may
be ahead of us—for example in the development of the thrust
of your rockets for the investigation of outer space. There may
be some instances, for example, color television, where we’re
ahead of you. But in order for both of us benefit... Late July,
1959... Moscow
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