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Imperialism and the U.S..

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Presentation on theme: "Imperialism and the U.S.."— Presentation transcript:

1 Imperialism and the U.S.

2 The Monroe Doctrine Started It All…
The Monroe Doctrine was passed in It stated that any further acts of European colonization in the Americas would be seen as acts of aggression Critics say that this Doctrine was used to prevent Europe from colonizing countries with resources that were valuable to America American government said they were simply worried about the good of the people in the colonized countries The truth? Who knows….

3 The U.S. in Middle America
By 1900, America was beginning to meddle in the affairs of southern countries As a result of the Spanish-American war, Cuba became a U.S. protectorate and Puerto Rico became a U.S. colony 1903, the U.S. supported a rebellion that allowed Panama to gain its independence from Columbia In return, the U.S. got a ten mile wide strip of land running from coast to coast in Panama. This was the most valuable piece of land in the new country, and there America build the Panama Canal. Charged high fees and tariffs to any other countries wanting to use it Did America feel bad about this? Nope… American investments in Latin America followed, as did American resolve to protect those investments Occupation of countries commenced (Cuba, Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, Haiti, Nicaragua, Panama, Dom. Republic) More and more Latin American countries began to resent the interference from the “big bully” to the North

4 U.S. in the Phillipines The Spanish-American War was fought largely on Philippine soil Originally, the Americans and Philippines were allies against the Spanish However, when the Spanish and Americans resolved their issues and the war ended, America decided to take over the Philippine islands since they were already stationed there and fought for the land After the war, Spain ceded the Philippines to the U.S. and Americans began to occupy main cities/ports, forcing the people to pay taxes for all goods and answer to American government and troops The Philippine people decided to revolt to gain independence. Estimates state that 30 million Philippine people were killed Some have called it an act of genocide by the U.S. When Roosevelt became president he pardoned all people involved Didn’t gain independence until 1946

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6 U.S. in Hawaii Hawaii was originally a free land ruled by a Queen.
First Europe made contact and began annexing the islands. Eventually Europe annexed the Islands to the U.S. who passed a bill to make Hawaii a U.S. Territory despite protests from the islanders. Hawaii remained a territory for 60 years. Although some tried for independence, the people of Hawaii preferred to be a territory rather than a state They got away with importing cheap labor/immigration laws that were illegal in many states Much of Hawaiian culture and heritage was wiped out by U.S. occupation of the islands Made a state in 1959

7 U.S. in Iraq Is This Imperialism?


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