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