Tuesday, February 5, 2019
Benevolent Assimilation: The American Conquest of the Philippines, 1899
Benevolent Assimilation The American Conquest of the Philippines, 1899-1903 moth miller provides an score of the American-Philippines contendfare from 1899-1903, revealing aspects of United States imperialism that are often forgotten. moth miller provides both a military history as well as a demonstration of the way America lied and forgot its history, justifying warfare and colony as a step for greater good. Americas involvement in the Philippines is sometimes remembered as an act to protect Filipinos from Spain, and to teach them American land. Other historians look to the war as a part of American imperialism linked to its capitalist and racial nature. Many other historians argue that imperialism was a short lived mistake in American history that was just one stumble in the countrys greatness. Millers account shows, in great detail, the slipperiness of events which happened, and the ways in which individuals can take for the power of nations. Generally Americas conquest of the Philippines is understood to be motivated by the expansion of democracy. The United States was already actively expanding and conquering land and people, and for the most part they were doing so in regions thought to be geographically logical. Expanding to the west was not considered colonization, but once the U.S. reached the far away islands of the Philippines, their actions seemed to compulsion a larger explanation to be justified. The United States moving beyond its natural proximity made the Philippines a more problematic site, and therefrom easier to understand as an act of imperialism.Miller argues that when the United States was just blood to get involved in the Philippines few people new anything roughly the islands. There were no intention... ...d Beveridge, the anti-imperialists were letting the people off the hook and in their own way preserving the American sense of innocenceIf anything, they seemed to take their cues from their drawing card in the White House by first putting break of mind all the sordid episodes in the conquest, and then forgetting the entire war itself (253).The United States conquest of the Philippines and the ways it is remembered is one aspect of this countries history of imperialism. This war stems out of energy left from the Civil War, the United States competition with Spain, and later on feeds into the Vietnam War. This story is all too reflective of the current situation in Iraq and the war on terrorism. According to Miller, the United States hides its imperialism behind the name of democracy and civilization, claiming to act for the better of people unable to govern themselves.
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