<P> One of the earliest uses of the term Free World as a politically significant term occurs in Frank Capra's World War II propaganda film series Why We Fight . In Prelude to War, the first film of that series, the "free world" is portrayed as a white planet, directly contrasted with the black planet called the "slave world". The film depicts the free world as the Western Hemisphere, led by the United States and Western Europe, and the slave world as the Eastern Hemisphere, dominated by Nazi Germany and the Japanese Empire . </P> <P> "Free World" had its origins in the Cold War, the phrase is still occasionally used after the end of the Cold War and during the Global War on Terrorism . Samuel P. Huntington says the term has been replaced by the concept of the international community, which, he argues, "has become the euphemistic collective noun (replacing "the Free World") to give global legitimacy to actions reflecting the interests of the United States and other Western powers ." </P> <P> The "Leader of the Free World" is a colloquialism, first used during the Cold War, to describe either the United States or, more commonly, the President of the United States . The term when used in this context suggests that the United States is the principal democratic superpower, and the US President is by extension the leader of the world's democratic states, i.e. the "Free World". </P> <P> Dwight D. Eisenhower (to the Associated Press, Oct. 1), The Los Angeles Times, Oct. 2, 1958 </P>

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