Paul Harvey’s 1965 radio commentary, often called “If I Were the Devil,” has circulated for decades, but its renewed attention today comes from more than nostalgia. When people listen now, many find it less dramatic and more reflective. What once felt like imaginative storytelling now sounds like a meditation on human behavior, values, and gradual cultural change. Harvey was not predicting specific events or technologies; he was exploring timeless concerns about responsibility, character, and how societies slowly shift.
In the broadcast, Harvey used a creative perspective to show that change rarely comes through sudden collapse. Instead, it happens through small compromises. He described a world where distraction replaces reflection, comfort outweighs character, and personal responsibility quietly fades. In the 1960s, this symbolic style of radio commentary was meant to provoke thought, not to offer literal forecasts. Listeners heard it as a cautionary reflection on everyday choices and cultural direction.
