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Página 33
... Imperialism . I took my title , as I take now my text , from Kip- ling's " Recessional , " the noblest hymn of our century : we forget . " For it seemed to me then , just after the battle of Manila , that we might forget who we are and ...
... Imperialism . I took my title , as I take now my text , from Kip- ling's " Recessional , " the noblest hymn of our century : we forget . " For it seemed to me then , just after the battle of Manila , that we might forget who we are and ...
Página 34
... Imperialism ? It is my own belief that the crisis is already passing . Our choice for the future is made . We have already lost our stomach for Imperialism , as we come to see what it means . A century of republicanism has given the ...
... Imperialism ? It is my own belief that the crisis is already passing . Our choice for the future is made . We have already lost our stomach for Imperialism , as we come to see what it means . A century of republicanism has given the ...
Página 45
... Imperialism to foot the bills . But the question of such need is one for com- mercial experts , not for politicians . Our decision should be in the interest of commerce , not of sea power . We need , no doubt , navy enough to protect us ...
... Imperialism to foot the bills . But the question of such need is one for com- mercial experts , not for politicians . Our decision should be in the interest of commerce , not of sea power . We need , no doubt , navy enough to protect us ...
Página 47
... Imperialism , --all are petty things beside what the higher freedom demands . To turn to these empty and showy affairs is to neglect our own business for the gossip of our neighbors . Men say that we want nobler political problems than ...
... Imperialism , --all are petty things beside what the higher freedom demands . To turn to these empty and showy affairs is to neglect our own business for the gossip of our neighbors . Men say that we want nobler political problems than ...
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Términos y frases comunes
activity æsthetic affairs American Ammianus Marcellinus attention become C. M. Ritter called to order character Chico child classes colonies Constitution course of study Cuba David Starr Jordan democracy desire duties E. E. Brown Edwin D Elizabeth Rogers England English experience F. S. Reager fact familiar force gain give Guy H Herbart Herbartian Imperialism impersonal interests intellectual interest in superiority interests of sense J. D. Sweeney John Bidwell judgment KATE AMES knowledge lecture lesson live Lowell High School M. E. Dittmar manifest destiny Marysville ment mind nations Norse Mythology novel O. E. Graves objects original sources overwork pain parent passive Pax Britannica Philippines political present President C.
M. Ritter problem pupils reality Recitation Red Bluff remote interest republic result school course secondary Secretary session was called SESSION-FRIDAY Starbuck Stokes teach teachers things thought tion vivid Warmoth Winterburn
Pasajes populares
Página 47 - Far-called, our navies melt away, On dune and headland sinks the fire; Lo all our pomp of yesterday Is one with Nineveh and Tyre.
Página 47 - God, shall have a new birth of freedom ; and that government of the people, for the people, and by the people, shall not perish from the earth.
Página 60 - ... who show themselves able to profit by an education prolonged to the eighteenth year, and whose parents are able to support them while they remain so long at school.
Página 60 - Their main function is to prepare for the duties of life that small proportion of all the children in the country — a proportion small in number, but very important to the welfare of the nation — who show themselves able to profit by an education prolonged to the eighteenth year, and whose parents are able to support them while they remain so long at school.
Página 38 - First, you push on into territories where you have no business to be, and where you had promised not to go; secondly, your intrusion provokes resentment, and resentment means resistance; thirdly, you instantly cry out that the people are rebellious and that their act is rebellion (this in spite of your own assurance that you have no intention of setting up a permanent sovereignty over them) ; fourthly, you send a force to stamp out the rebellion; and fifthly, having spread bloodshed, confusion and...
Página 47 - The only government that I recognize — and it matters not how few are at the head of it, or how small its army — is that power that establishes justice in the land, never that which establishes injustice.
Página 38 - ... rebellion; and fifthly, having spread bloodshed, confusion and anarchy, you declare, with hands uplifted to the heavens, that moral reasons force you to stay, for, if you were to leave, this territory would be left in a condition which no civilized Power could contemplate with equanimity or with composure. These are the five stages in the Forward Rake's progress.
Página 35 - ... sovereign will of Congress alone. This implies taxation without representation, a matter of which something was said in Boston one hundred and thirty years ago. Our Constitution knows no such thing as permanently dependent colonies, else the acquisition of such would have been formally forbidden. "To be subject to the will of Congress, as the history of Alaska has clearly shown, is to be subject to vacillation, corruption, tyranny, parsimony, and neglect. The greatest scandals England has known...
Página 38 - Merritt, not our politicians, but our jurists, our teachers, with foresters, electricians, manufacturers, mining experts, and experts in the various industries. Then, after they have had a fair chance and shown that they cannot care for themselves, we should turn them over quietly to the paternalism of peace-loving Holland or peacecompelling Great Britain.
Página 3 - Article VII This Constitution may be amended at any annual meeting by a majority vote of all members present.