An essay on the American contribution and the democratic idea eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 60 pages of information about An essay on the American contribution and the democratic idea.

An essay on the American contribution and the democratic idea eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 60 pages of information about An essay on the American contribution and the democratic idea.
the globe.  Democracy, divided against itself, cannot stand.  A league of democratic nations, of democratic peoples, has become imperative.  Hereafter, if democracy wins, self-determination, and not imperialistic exploitation, is to be the universal rule.  It is the extension, on a world scale, of Mr. Wilson’s Mexican policy, the application of democratic principles to international relationships, and marks the inauguration of a new era.  We resort to force against force, not for dominion, but to make the world safe for the idea on which we believe the future of civilization depends, the sacred right of self-government.  We stand prepared to treat with the German people when they are ready to cast off autocracy and militarism.  Our attitude toward them is precisely our attitude toward the Mexican People.  We believe, and with good reason, that the German system of education is authoritative and false, and was more or less deliberately conceived in order to warp the nature and produce complexes in the mind of the German people for the end of preserving and perpetuating the power of the Junkers.  We have no quarrel with the duped and oppressed, but we war against the agents of oppression.  To the conservative mind such an aspiration appears chimerical.  But America, youngest of the nations, was born when modern science was gathering the momentum which since has enabled it to overcome, with a bewildering rapidity, many evils previously held by superstition to be ineradicable.  As a corollary to our democratic creed, we accepted the dictum that to human intelligence all things are possible.  The virtue of this dictum lies not in dogma, but in an indomitable attitude of mind to which the world owes its every advance in civilization; quixotic, perhaps, but necessary to great accomplishment.  In searching for a present-day protagonist, no happier example could be found than Mr. Henry Ford, who exhibits the characteristic American mixture of the practical and the ideal.  He introduces into industry humanitarian practices that even tend to increase the vast fortune which by his own efforts he has accumulated.  He sees that democratic peoples do not desire to go to war, he does not believe that war is necessary and inevitable, he lays himself open to ridicule by financing a Peace Mission.  Circumstances force him to abandon his project, but he is not for one moment discouraged.  His intention remains.  He throws all his energy and wealth into a war to end war, and the value of his contribution is inestimable.

A study of Mr. Ford’s mental processes and acts illustrates the true mind of America.  In the autumn of 1916 Mr. Wilson declared that “the people of the United States want to be sure what they are fighting about, and they want to be sure that they are fighting for the things that will bring the world justice and peace.  Define the elements; let us know that we are not fighting for the prevalence of this nation over that, for the ambitions of this group of nations as compared with the ambitions of that group of nations, let us once be convinced that we are called in to a great combination for the rights of mankind, and America will unite her force and spill her blood for the great things she has always believed in and followed.”

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An essay on the American contribution and the democratic idea from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.