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The Declaration of Independence is full of promise and a few mysteries. A rare copy of it ended up at The Henry Ford Museum ...
In the heart of downtown Dallas sits the J. Erik Jonsson Central Library. If you venture onto the seventh floor into a darkened back room, you’ll find a piece of what July Fourth is all about: an ...
The original Declaration of Independence is a permanent exhibit at the museum, but this weekend, they’re opening the vault ...
But two researchers have now found that the "copy" is a rare original from 1300 issued by King Edward I and is worth millions of dollars, although Harvard does not intend to sell it.
Later, in explaining his actions, he enunciated what some have since called “the Johnson Doctrine.” It is hardly that, being at most a corollary to the tried and true Monroe Doctrine.
On May 20, 1934, President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered an address to a joint session of Congress. Roosevelt used the address to commemorate the centennial of the death of the Marquis de Lafayette.
The Monroe Doctrine laid the foundation for future U.S. foreign policy, later expanded by Theodore Roosevelt through the Roosevelt Corollary, which justified American intervention in Latin America.
If so, his future policy would seem like President Theodore Roosevelt’s “Corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine. Roosevelt’s Corollary was promulgated in the age of European (and American ...
It assumed a new meaning under the “Roosevelt corollary” of 1904, which included the danger of any internal political revolts, consistent with a policy to “walk softly but carry a big stick.” ...
Presumably, Roosevelt would approve. It’s important to note, however, that today’s circumstances differ in one drastic way from the age of Roosevelt, Cleveland, or Monroe.
The nature of the current strategic competition suggests that Trump will need to craft a corollary to the Monroe Doctrine radically different from Theodore Roosevelt's. It will depend on consent ...