Of Liberalism In Emily Rosenberg's Spreading The American Dream?

1588 Words4 Pages

In Emily Rosenberg's book Spreading The American Dream: American Economic and Cultural Expansion, she chronicles the history of American expansionism throughout the Western Hemisphere, Europe, and the Far East. I contend that not only does the United States disregard their path towards liberalism when it suits their interests, but also that the United States' intervention in Latin America was meant to undercut European competition while boosting their own economic supremacy throughout the world. The conflicts between global economic expansion and classic liberalism presented themselves beginning with McKinley's presidency, evolving but still conflicting all the way through the Truman administration. With an increased government role in foreign …show more content…

As a noted constitutionalist, Wilson preferred to adhere to the laws of the land rather than interfere unnecessarily in other countries affairs, unless it was of great importance. Wilson's trepidation to in any way go against the liberal order was mirrored by then Secretary of State (and one-time presidential candidate) William Jennings Bryan, who exclaimed "It is our intention to employ every agency of the Department of State to extend and safeguard American commerce and legitimate American enterprises in foreign lands . . . but this government will . . know no favorites." (65) World War I, however, would spell an end to the relative lack of government intervention and approval, as "for the first time, the government had the power to decide how much to lend to foreign governments that sought to purchase American exports," which "implied considerable political and economic leverage." (67) The war also gave an added impetus to the vital importance of cables and communications, as the Central and South American Telegraph Company sought to end the British stranglehold over the regional market. That, in combination with the creation of organizations like the Federal Trade Commission in 1913, was in direct contrast with the ideology that monopolies hindered free market competition, as they provided a "lobby in favor of legislation designed to legalize monopolistic combinations in the export trade. Once again, American exceptionalism with an overriding desire to dominate, painted American foreign policymakers as charlatans, only concerned with principle up until the point it could no longer serve the best interests of the United

Open Document