The Causes And Effects Of American Imperialism In The United States

1409 Words3 Pages

Kaylah-Marie Tomlinson U.S. History 152 Paper Throughout history the United States has acted in foreign affairs as a policing nation. The justification for which has been to liberate a subjugated people. Yet people who heard this reasoning before 1964 would have felt a sense of hypocrisy, because on the home front there were subjugated people. These groups of people had been deemed unworthy of fundamental constitutional rights. They aided in foreign efforts only to be disenfranchised at home. America was not a country even for the white, but more specifically the white man. While there were many groups of individuals who suffered from this reality, this essay will focus on one in particular, African Americans. Mainly, how the seed, to end the subjugation of African Americans, was planted by To highlight the effects of imperialism three instances of American involvement will be considered, first the war of 1898, the Philippine-American war and finally the Great War. An important document in gaging the reasons behind the war of 1898 was the Declaration of War by President William McKinley in 1898. Therein he stated that the “neutrality laws” were no longer working, they caused “enormous losses to American trade and commerce…irritation… and disturbance among the citizens” (98). McKinley went on to state four reasons by which involvement in Cuba was justifiable. The first reason given was that the parties were unwilling to come to a reasonable middle ground to stop the bloodshed, though not occurring on the home front, was right at the front door. Second, they owed it to the citizens of Cuba to liberate them from the subjugation of the Spanish. Third, the current situation was highly dangerous to trade and commerce. Fourth, the situation was dangerous to the lives of traveling Americans as well as to trading vessels which sustained the

More about The Causes And Effects Of American Imperialism In The United States

Open Document