Thank you all for your opinions and keeping this discussion civil.
elliodoc wrote:
One response to the OP is that the term “empire” simply doesn’t apply, unless you use a very loose definition of the term which would probably apply to almost any nation on earth.
I do believe almost every nation on earth was imperialist at some form in its history. Why do you believe it is a loose definition of the term? In my opinion, an empire is the military conquest of foreign territory that is integrated into either your political status or complete economic dominance.
JamesR wrote:
I believe it's all political propoganda really, and an attempt to bring people towards patriotism of their country, because to be honest, most Americans (again I am an American) do not have any sense of obligation/responsibility to their country or others, it's all about entitlement and self. And really most people have more loyalty to their state then the US as a whole
That is an interesting theory which does somewhat answer my question, thank you.
pownrwhopowns wrote:
I'm a US citizen and am currently in AP US history so I've recently learned about America's "Experiment in Imperialism"
Basically, America never reaally had colonies, they were called protectorates, countries the US would help set up and would leave when their governments functioned better (ex Philippines). They intervened in governments under different policies like the Roosevelt collorary, but only mainly used these countries as economic resources. the term colony was almost never applied. Also this wasn't a big period of time and no Americans really moved to these countries/spread an influence other than that of industry.
For these reasons and the reason that why would the US make this a significant part of everyones knowledge if to the country it didn't have THAT big of an effect is why i think many US citizens don't know about the US's experiment in imperialism.
Thank you for your opinion but I completely disagree with you. I believe protectorates were simply colonies in practice but with a 'nicer' sounding name. This was the same case with the League of Nations mandates. The British and French took control of former Ottoman and German colonies as 'mandates' to help them develop but in practice were simply added to their collection of suppressed states. You discard 'used these countries as economic resources' as not important but that is clearly the reason why the Americans were in there in the first place, to ensure that economic conditions are favourable to the US rather than to the Philippine people. I also disagree with you when you say 'it wasn't a big period of time.' The first act of imperialism committed by the US was the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 where thousands of Natives no longer had the right to live there and were forced to reallocate and lost their territory to the US. This was the first of many similar actions to other ethnicities. So in conclusion, Imperialism was a very large part of US history. I realise that this answer may sound degrading to the US but I do not intend to degrade it or praise it. Many other countries did the same to other people and some were even worse.
Beowulf03809 wrote:
Some of this still sounds very much like a colony but I think the difference is that for the European nations that went thru the Imperial Period as you describe they directly set out with the intention of establishing that colony. The territories currently controlled by the US were generally acquired either during military conflicts around the time of its independence....
The leaders of the US territories are directly elected by their population and I believe they have established their own constitution as well.
There was not a period in US history where it actively sought to acquire lands from another political entity and set up its own colonial governing body anywhere close to the dramatic expansion of the European nations during the peak in the 1500-1800s.
Again, I respect your answer but I disagree with you on many points. You mention that the US's expansion was not as dramatic as European nations yet considering the United States grew over 6x its original size is extremely dramatic. How is the US's expansion of conquering native land any different to that of the growth of the Russian empire or the Ottoman Empire? You say that the territories controlled by the US were acquired during military conflicts, well does that not count as imperialistic control? You say that the US never directly set out with the intention of colonialisng but Manifest Destiny specifically states that it is the US's fate and right to control land stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific. You also say that the US allowed for elections in some of its colonies, that is true to an extent, but the United States held firm control of who would be the leader of Cuba for a long while. You can still be imperialistic and allow elections as the British did with Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
Jamros wrote:
Was Manifest Destiny imperialistic? Yes. But imperialism is most obvious as the forceful military subversion of a sovereign state, rather than any grasp at territory that isn't yours.
I agree with the vast majority of what you stated. But isn't 'forceful military subversion of a sovereign state' identical to 'any grasp at territory that isn't yours?'