| John Mabry Mathews - 1928 - 726 pages
...existing dependencies of any European power we shall not interfere. Again, Secretary Olney declared that "the states of America, South as well as North, by...commercially and politically, of the United States." This statement contains several errors. In fact, the United States is more remote geographically from... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart, John Gould Curtis - 1901 - 758 pages
...States whenever that independence is endangered ? The question can be candidly answered in but one way. The states of America, South as well as North, by...commercially and politically, of the United States. To allow the subjugation of any of them by an European power is, of course, to completely reverse that... | |
| 1919 - 434 pages
...union between a European and an American State unnatural and inexpedient, will hardly be denied. . . . The States of America, South as well as North, by...commercially and politically, of the United States. . . . To-day the United States is practically sovereign on this continent, and its fiat is law upon... | |
| J. Reuben Clark (Jr.) - 1930 - 272 pages
...States whenever that independence is endangered? The question can be candidly answered in but one way. The States of America, South as well as North, by...commercially and politically, of the United States. To allow the subjugation of any of them by an European power is, of course, to completely reverse that... | |
| 1980 - 272 pages
...States whenever that independence is endangered? The question can be candidly answered in but one way. The States of America, South as well as North, by...commercially and politically, of the United States. To allow the subjugation of any of them by an European power is, of course, to completely reverse that... | |
| VD Mahajan - 1988 - 1014 pages
...political union between an European and an American State unnatural and inexpedient will hardly be denied. for democracy, for the right Today the United States is practically sovereign on this continent, and its fiat is law upon the subjects... | |
| Alyn Brodsky - 2000 - 529 pages
...interposition in the event of such a threat was justified on the grounds that these states, "by geographic proximity, by natural sympathy, by similarity of governmental...commercially and politically, of the United States. To allow the subjugation of any of them by an European power is ... to completely reverse that situation... | |
| H.W. Brands - 2002 - 383 pages
...[to improve his argument, Olney spoke of the two continents as divisions of a single super-America], by geographical proximity, by natural sympathy, by...commercially and politically, of the United States. To allow the subjugation of any one of them by a European power is, of course, to completely reverse... | |
| Edward Parliament Kohn - 2004 - 274 pages
...inexpedient," but he asserted that the people of the western hemisphere shared naturally inherent interests: "The states of America, South as well as North, by...commercially and politically, of the United States. To allow the subjugation of any of them by an European power is, of course, to completely reverse that... | |
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