| Albert Shaw - 1896 - 814 pages
...prevent our taking into account the varying degrees of national interest in varying cases. He says: "The United States has not the slightest wish to establish...aggrandize itself on American soil at the expense of an American state. Furthermore, no transfer of an American colony from one European state to another... | |
| Theodore Roosevelt - 1897 - 392 pages
...as to prevent our taking into account the varying degrees of national interest in varying cases. The United States has not the slightest wish to establish...another is to be permitted, if, in the judgment of the United States, such transfer would be hostile to its own interests. John Quincy Adams, who, during... | |
| Theodore Roosevelt - 1897 - 396 pages
...as to prevent our taking into account the varying degrees of national interest in varying cases. The United States has not the slightest wish to establish...another is to be permitted, if, in the judgment of the United States, such transfer would be hostile to its own interests. John Quincy Adams, who, during... | |
| Theodore Roosevelt - 1897 - 394 pages
...as to prevent our taking into account the varying degrees of national interest in varying cases. The United States has not the slightest wish to establish...another is to be permitted, if, in the judgment of the United States, such transfer would be hostile to its own interests. John Quincy Adams, who, during... | |
| United States. President (1901-1909 : Roosevelt), Theodore Roosevelt - 1897 - 342 pages
...as to prevent our taking into account the varying degrees of national interest in varying cases. The United States has not the slightest wish to establish...another is to be permitted, if, in the judgment of the United States, such transfer would be hostile to its own interests. John Quincy Adams, who, during... | |
| Theodore Roosevelt - 1904 - 394 pages
...as to prevent our taking into account the varying degrees of national interest in varying cases. The United States has not the slightest wish to establish...another is to be permitted, if, in the judgment of the United States, such transfer would be hostile to its own interests. John Quincy Adams, who, during... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1904 - 710 pages
...multitude of revolution-ridden states.' In discussing the Monroe doctrine in 1896, he said : — ' The United States has not the slightest wish to establish...settled between them by any one of the usual methods.' (' American Ideals,' p. 230.) The old argument that the establishment of new European possessions in... | |
| Theodore Roosevelt - 1904 - 36 pages
...other American States, or to become responsible for their misdeeds. If one of them becomes involved ia an ordinary quarrel with a European power, such quarrel...allowed to aggrandize itself on American soil at the cxpen-se of any American^ State. Furthermore, no transfer of an American colony from one European State... | |
| Archibald Ross Colquhoun - 1904 - 488 pages
...Spanish-American misconduct, and that, in the event of a republic having a misunderstanding with Europe, the quarrel must be settled between them "by any one of the usual methods."1 Unfortunately, power, without responsibility, though an ideal state, is not easily attained... | |
| 1906 - 856 pages
...only to compare his utterances In 1896 with those in 1905. In the earlier pronouncement he said: The United States has not the slightest wish to establish...American soil at the expense of any American State.' This theory has now developed into something very different. Mr. Roosevelt's claim has become that... | |
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