In "Weeping State of Liberty," a horned, clawed Roosevelt-oni waves "democracy" on a piece of paper while wielding the club of "dictatorship" (or the torch of "dictatorship," which he will use to burn the paper on which democracy is written--it is hard to tell which). Around him on the spikes of Liberty's crown are four images. The two on the left are rather clear: above a figure identified as Jewish inflates a balloon or profits made of the U.S. flag; below a worker holds a sign saying "On Strike." Both images reinforce a broader portrayal of Americans as selfish seekers of their own personal profit at the expense of the greater good (Japanese, by contrast, were portrayed as sublimating their individuality for the good of the common cause). The two images at the right seem to be further examples of the idea of selfishness: a carousing sailor and, below him, a women representing the ability to wage war--or, in this case, the lack of it.