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The war against Spain and for the liberation of Cuba was one that would prove the superiority of America and its ideals. The United States, too, could join the nations of Europe as a major world power, with interests in every corner of the globe. Roosevelt became a hero as a result of his exploits in the Spanish-American War - a modern day crusader. He used his standing to vault to the governorship of the State of New York. As Governor he now headed the wealthiest most populous state in the nation, enjoying a position of influence and power unparalleled in his career. New York was the great melting pot, the entry point for the vast waves of immigrants that were arriving from Europe. Immigration in this era had changed dramatically from the earliest days of the Republic. Not only the numbers were different, but the people who came were different. To many, the teeming masses were a European version of the benighted peoples of the distant areas of the globe. Interestingly, it was after his election as Governor of New York in 1898 that Rudyard Kipling sent a copy of his poem "The White Man's Burden" to Roosevelt. His aim was simple, to convince Theodore to throw his weight behind the full American occupation and colonization of the Philippines, Spain's former colony in the Far East, - "Now go in and put all the weight of your influence into hanging on permanently to the whole Philippines. America has gone and stuck a pickaxe into the foundations of a rotten house and she is morally bound to build the house over again from the foundations or have it fall about her ears."
Roosevelt was a kindred spirit. His views also appealed to the general public. Added to McKinley's ticket as candidate for Vice president, Roosevelt carried the day with his expansionist rhetoric and support of the gold standard against William Jennings Bryan. Theodore appeared to have the pulse of the nation as he pronounced, "Speak softly and carry a big stick."
Roosevelt's tenure as Vice President was brief. McKinley's assassination in September 1901 propelled him into the nation's highest office. At only 42, he was the youngest president then or now. Seizing the opportunity, he quickly set about implementing his own ideas. Success in the Spanish-American War had placed the United States in a position of unique power in the Western Hemisphere. Theodore quickly used this leverage to formulate the Roosevelt Corollary - a new interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine that gave America the right to interfere in nations that were, from the American perspective, not being properly governed. Specifically, the Roosevelt Corollary applied the idea that a nation's inability to manage its debt would be an excuse for U.S. intervention, this intervention to be conducted as means of preventing one or other of the European powers form fulfilling the same role and so expanding its influence in the Americas. Oliver Wendell Holmes saw Roosevelt's new doctrine as a legitimate response to renewed European interest in Latin America, and as a fulfillment of America's role of protecting its fellow republics and ensuring their territorial integrity.
In foreign affairs, the new president's "big stick" was turning out to be a way to keep other nations in line. Successive presidents would use similar ideas, again and again, to enforce supposed American values; values that, like Theodore Roosevelt, they increasingly presented as universal concepts.
Universal ideas about how nations should behave were easily translated into notions of what the citizens of those nations might want. In this area, Theodore began at home. His "Square Deal" couched in trademark plain, no-nonsense terms the belief that ordinary Americans deserved the protection of government. They deserved equal standing in their dealings with the industrial behemoths that were in the process of taking over the American economy and, with it, running the day-to-day lives of average men and women. The Square Deal applied initially to the anti-trust measures that were gaining strength at the turn of the Twentieth Century. Roosevelt insisted on equality between the corporations and the workers. In essence, he sought to preserve order by preventing either side from gaining too much power, while recognizing the fact that rampant industrial growth was adversely affecting basic American notions of...
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