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- emerging U.S.
Question SA-2. Here is the text reference (p. 160/1):
Towards the end of the Century there was a strong current of thought
in the U.S. that stressed social Darwinian ideas of the survival of the
fittest, and Spencerian notions of superiority of the Anglo-Saxon and European
races of the mid-latitudes. Building upon the earlier notions of the U.S.
as a chosen people with a manifest destiny to become a great power, they
were to provide the ideological basis for U.S. policies in Latin America
and the Caribbean for an extended period. These ideas were coupled to the
geopolitical theories of Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan to justify the expansion
of a superior nation into the weaker and inferior nations of Latin America
(and especially the Caribbean Basin). To be taken seriously as a major actor
on the world stage, the argument went, it was essential that the U.S. control
its own "back yard" of the Caribbean, which was frequently called
"the American (U.S.) Mediterranean". This in turn meant controlling
the proposed inter-oceanic canal and several key islands of the Caribbean.