hte5.txt 11 KB

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  1. The American Dream
  2. It is the intent of this paper to prove that the American Dream can
  3. best be explained as a ciity upon a hill. Ciity upon a hill meaning
  4. being above and superior over those below. The Civil War, the imperialistic
  5. race of the 19th century, the Korean War, the KKK, and the Gulf War are all
  6. examples of the American Dream of superiority playing a part in American
  7. History. Each American has a different idea of this superiority, but
  8. nonetheless strive to achieve it, whatever it may be in.
  9. The Civil War which split the United States, was a clash of two
  10. aspects of approaching the American Dream in a young America. Both sides
  11. felt their idea's and philosophies were superior to those of the opposing
  12. side and therefore would benefit the country more and make it superior.
  13. Both North and South wanted to better the country to have it achieve the
  14. American Dream. Unfortunately, each side had a different perspective on
  15. how to approach it. Slavery was a major issue, the North against, the
  16. South pro. The disagreement on slavery lead to difficulty in the issue of
  17. Westward expansion. Both agreed to it, but whether to admit them as free
  18. or slave states was where the split occurred. The compromise of 1850
  19. stated that California enters free, and New Mexico and Utah decided on
  20. their own which is giving them more state rights in which the South heavily
  21. supported. This compromise did not satisfy each side fully. The issue of
  22. State rights intensified by the issue of slavery because the Southern
  23. states felt they had the right to decide on their own about Slavery without
  24. Federal intervention. It seems the Southern states felt that the American
  25. dream was out of their reach because they felt powerless and inferior with
  26. the Central government. When the American revolution was fought to break
  27. from Britain, the Southern States thought they would be treated as
  28. sovereign and free. With the State's limited power, they felt as if the
  29. Federal government would become a monarchy. The Northern States wanted the
  30. American dream achieved for the whole country to be industrial,
  31. anti-slavery, and very federalist. Upon these institutions they planned to
  32. make the U.S a superior nation in the world. The South wanted to achieve
  33. the same ultimate goal for the U.S but with agricultural, pro- slavery, and
  34. states sovereignty institutions. These are the differences between both
  35. sides in achieving the American Dream. In order to resolve the conflict
  36. of interests, North and South had to go to war to prove superiority thus
  37. proving which side is the ciity upon the hill in which the losing side
  38. would follow.
  39. During the time of Imperialism in the 19th century, the U.S wanted to
  40. expand worldwide and strive for the lead in the imperialistic race. In
  41. 1871, the U.S and Canada signed the Washington treaty meaning that the U.S
  42. recognized Canada as an independent dominion. Any schemes to forcefully
  43. annex Canada and to unite the North American continent under the U.S flag
  44. had been rejected. The U.S could not expand any further in North America
  45. and had to look at other parts of the world for expansion. At the time,
  46. there were many other nations looking to expand its empire such as Britain
  47. and Germany. Some Southern expansionists saw Cuba as an interest because
  48. it could have possibly been used as a slave territory. Because Northerners
  49. were highly against slavery, the plan was dropped. After the Civil War,
  50. Secretary of State Seward had negotiated a treaty to purchase the virgin
  51. Islands from Denmark, but the senate rejected this treaty. They were not
  52. purchased until 1917. In 1859, the U.S annexed the Midway Islands in the
  53. South Pacific, and half the Samoan Islands; the other half belonging to
  54. Germany. Hawaii, another Pacific island, had always been important to the
  55. U.S. It served as an important base for trade with Japan and China. When
  56. the U.S annexed Hawaii in 1893 after a coup, to justify it, the U.S claimed
  57. it was an important strategic military foothold. They also claimed that the
  58. inferior Hawaiian natives were incapable of self government, and that it
  59. was in their best interests. After the annexation of Hawaii, and later the
  60. Philippines in 1899, it seemed clear the U.S was relentless in becoming the
  61. most powerful imperialistic nation. It is this idea of expansion thus
  62. gaining power and superiority over other nations that proves the American
  63. Dream/Ciity upon a hill being about superiority.
  64. The invasion of South Korea by North Korea was the opportunity the U.S
  65. needed to invade and de-communize North Korea thus causing China to
  66. intervene therefore justifying the possible invasion of China. When World
  67. War II ended, the U.S and U.S.S.R agreed to occupy Korea. The U.S occupied
  68. south of the 38th parallel, and the U.S.S.R North. Both sides wanted Korea
  69. to be united, the U.S.S.R wanted it under communism, and the U.S
  70. capitalism. They were split. North became communist, South became
  71. capitalist. South Korea was recognized by the U.S and the United Nations
  72. while North Korea was recognized by the Soviet Union and its allies. There
  73. were many tensions between the Koreas. On June 1950, the North Korean army
  74. with Soviet weapons invaded South Korea, in an attempt to take it over.
  75. The United States, taking great interest, appealed to the U.N to condemn
  76. the invasion and to send forces to liberate South Korea. The Soviet
  77. representative to the U.N was not present to veto due to the fact that the
  78. Soviet Union was protesting against the refusal to allow China to enter the
  79. U.N. When the U.N forces under U.S command liberated South Korea, U.S
  80. president Truman ordered that the forces go beyond the initial mission of
  81. liberation, and invade North Korea. As the U.N forces advanced deeper into
  82. North Korea, China warned them to withdraw. The forces refused and on
  83. November 1950 were attacked by 200,000 Chinese soldiers. The U.N forces
  84. faced with a fresh enemy, retreated south of the 38th parallel. In order
  85. to defeat the Chinese forces, Gen. MacArthur, commander of the forces,
  86. requested that China itself be attacked. Truman rejected the idea with the
  87. fear of getting the U.S.S.R directly involved thus setting the stage for
  88. World War III. The Korean War was fought to get into North Korea for these
  89. main reasons: To decrease the Soviet influence in the time of Cold war
  90. thus increasing U.S influence, and to get into China which has the largest
  91. market in the world. MacArthur and Truman both had these objectives in
  92. mind but wanted to approach them differently. MacArthur, after invading
  93. North Korea and setting off the Chinese, wanted to directly attack China.
  94. Truman who wanted no risk of direct intervention by the Soviets, wanted
  95. strictly just to take North Korea and perhaps delay the invasion of China,
  96. since providing North Korea was taken, China is just a doorstep away. The
  97. Korean war clearly showed that the United States was pursuing the American
  98. Dream in two ways, one was to gain influence which in the time of the Cold
  99. War meant power. The other was for economic superiority over the rest of
  100. the world with the colossal Chinese market directly bordering coincide what
  101. the U.S wanted, North Korea.
  102. The Ku Klux Klan, originally formed on December 24 1865 in Pulaski,
  103. Tennessee, did then and does now stand for white supremacy and superiority
  104. in politics, economics and society. Although the klan everywhere fiercely
  105. preaches white supremacy, it focuses its attack on what they consider to be
  106. alien outsiders, particularly the Roman Catholic Church, which it believes
  107. is threatening traditional American ways and values. Despite their beliefs,
  108. they are Americans trying to achieve the American dream, being the idea
  109. of a Ciity upon a hill. The goal of the KKK has always been to purify
  110. America of all non- whites which they refer to as un-Americans. The KKK
  111. sees themselves as the only real Americans. The idea of a Ciity upon a
  112. hill originated with the Puritans and their idea of creating a perfect
  113. society in America which would serve as model for the rest of the World to
  114. follow. The KKK uses this original American Dream by interpreting it to
  115. fit their white supremacy mandate. The society they want to create is a
  116. pure white society that the rest of the world could follow. Their mandate
  117. of White supremacy clearly states that the KKK too has an American Dream,
  118. they too in their words and actions try to achieve the Ciity upon a hill
  119. status. Whether their goals are wrong or right, their efforts to
  120. ultimately make the white race and their traditional American beliefs
  121. superior over what they consider below them, is a clear example of the
  122. American Dream/Ciity upon a hill being all about superiority, no matter
  123. how it may be.
  124. The Gulf war showed that no nation should violate the interests of the
  125. United States. After the re-unification of Germany in October 1990, ending
  126. the cold war, a large number of U.S forces were no longer needed.
  127. Conveniently, at the same time, after the invasion of Kuwait by Iraq, the
  128. U.S had the perfect place to move its forces where they were needed for a
  129. deterrent to Iraq of invading other neighbouring countries. When war broke
  130. out in January 16, 1991, and ended a few months afterwards in April with
  131. Iraq defeated, plans for a Middle East peace conference started
  132. immediately. The defeat of Iraq affirmed the U.S's total control of the
  133. Middle East. With Iraqi aggression ceased, the U.S wanted to resolve the
  134. Israeli-Arab hostilities to therefore build a new post-cold war Middle East
  135. to meet American interests. Iraq's invasion of Kuwait violated American
  136. interests, with consequences following. The defeat of Iraq deterred other
  137. Middle East nations from violating American interests thus bringing them
  138. together to work out some form of peace that will accommodate the U.S in
  139. the perhaps coming American dominated New World Order. The U.S in bring
  140. to parties that hate each other -- Arabs and Israelis -- to a peace table
  141. for U.S interests shows that the U.S is a superior dominant force in the
  142. World. Its driving force, the idea of the American Dream of being a
  143. Ciity upon a hill. This means to be the best, to be superior, which the
  144. U.S has clearly shown in the Middle East.
  145. From the birth of America, to America today, the driving force and the
  146. heart of America has always been the American Dream. By looking at
  147. America today, the most powerful nation in the world, the dream has
  148. literally become a reality. The United States has always strived to be
  149. superior and it is today the most powerful nation in the world. The United
  150. States right now can not go much farther than it has already reached. If
  151. it tries to go beyond the dream, it could become a nightmare
  152. <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br>
  153. the internet
  154. <br><br>
  155. Words: 1822