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Historic Speech of the Week
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Albert Beveridge,
Speech on the 'Philippine Question', Washington D.C., January 9,
1900.
I address the Senate at this time because senators and members
of the House on both sides have asked that I give to Congress
and the country my observations in the Philippines and the Far
East, and the conclusions which those observations compel; and
because of hurtful resolutions introduced [condemning the
American occupation] and utterances made in the Senate, every
word of which will cost and is costing the lives of American
soldiers.
Mr. President, the times call for candor.. The Philippines are
ours forever, "territory belonging to the United States," as the
Constitution calls them.. And just beyond the Philippines are
China's illimitable markets.. We will not retreat from either..
We will not repudiate our duty in the archipelago. We will not
abandon our opportunity in the Orient.. We will not renounce our
part in the mission of our race, trustee, under God, of the
civilization of the world.. And we will move forward to our
work, not howling out regrets like slaves whipped to their
burdens but with gratitude for a task worthy of our strength and
Thanksgiving to Almighty God that He has marked us as His chosen
people, henceforth to lead in the regeneration of the world..
This island empire is the last land left in all the oceans.. If
it should prove a mistake to abandon it, the blunder once made
would be irretrievable.. If it proves a mistake to hold it, the
error can be corrected when we will.. Every other progressive
nation stands ready to relieve us..
But to hold it will be no mistake....The Philippines give us a
base at the door of all the East.. Lines of navigation from our
ports to the Orient and Australia, from the Isthmian Canal to
Asia, from all Oriental ports to Australia converge at and
separate from the Philippines.. They are a self-supporting,
dividend-paying fleet, permanently anchored at a spot selected
by the strategy of Providence, commanding the Pacific.. And the
Pacific is the ocean of the commerce of the future.. Most future
wars will be conflicts for commerce. The power that rules the
Pacific, therefore, is the power that rules the world. And, with
the Philippines, that power is and will forever be the American
Republic.
I have cruised more than 2,000 miles through the archipelago,
every moment a surprise at its loveliness and wealth.. I have
ridden hundreds of miles on the islands, every foot of the way a
revelation of vegetable and mineral riches.
No land in America surpasses in fertility the plains and valleys
of Luzon.. Rice and coffee, sugar and coconuts, hemp and
tobacco, and many products of the temperate as well as the
tropic grow in various sections of the archipelago.. I have seen
hundred of bushels of Indian corn lying in the road fringed with
banana trees.. The forests of Negroes, Mindanao, Mindora, Paluan
and parts of Luzon are invaluable and intact.. The wood of the
Philippines can supply the furniture of the world for a century
to come.. At Cebu the best informed man in the island told me
that 40 miles of Cebu's mountain chain are practically mountains
of coal...I have a nugget of gold picked up in its present form
on the banks of a Philippine creek. ...And this wealth is but a
small fraction.
...If we are willing to go to war rather than let England have a
few feet of frozen Alaska, which affords no market and commands
none, what should we not do rather than let England, Germany,
Russia, or Japan have all the Philippines? And no man on the
spot can fail to see that this would be their fate if we
retired.
...It will be hard for Americans who have not studied them to
understand the people.. They are a barbarous race, modified by
three centuries of contact with a decadent race.. The Filipino
is the South Sea Malay, put through a process of three hundred
years of superstition in religion, dishonesty in dealing,
disorder in habits of industry, and cruelty, caprice, and
corruption in government.. It is barely possible that 1,000 men
in all the archipelago are capable of self government in the
Anglo-Saxon sense....
But, Senators, it would be better to abandon this combined
garden and Gibraltar of the Pacific, and count our blood and
treasure already spent a profitable loss than to apply any
academic arrangement of self-government to these children.. They
are not capable of self-government.. How could they be? They are
Orientals, Malays, instructed by Spaniards in the latter's worst
estate.. They know nothing of practical government except as
they have witnessed the weak, corrupt, cruel, and capricious
rule of Spain.. What magic will anyone employ to dissolve in
their minds and characters those impressions of governors and
governed which three centuries of misrule has created? What
alchemy will change the oriental quality of their blood and set
the self-governing currents of the American pouring through
their Malay veins? How shall they, in the twinkling of an eye,
be exalted to the heights of self-governing peoples which
required a thousand years for us to reach, Anglo-Saxon though we
are?
...Self-government is no base and common thing to be bestowed on
the merely audacious.. It is the degree which crowns the
graduate of liberty, not the name of liberty's infant class, who
have not yet mastered the alphabet of freedom.... We must act on
the situation as it exists, not as we would wish it.
...Example for decades will be necessary to instruct them in
American ideas and methods of administration.. Example, example,
always example--this alone will teach them...
We cannot adopt the Dutch method in Java, nor the English method
in the Malay states, because both of these systems rest on and
operate through the existing governments of hereditary princes,
with Dutch and English as advisers.. But in the Philippines
there are no such hereditary rulers, no such established
governments.. There is no native machinery of administration
except that of the villages.. The people have been deprived of
the advantages of hereditary native princes, and yet not
instructed in any form of regular, just, and orderly government.
...The men we send to administer civilized government in the
Philippines must be themselves the highest examples of our
civilization.. I use the word "examples," for examples they must
be in that word's most absolute sense.. They must be men of the
world and of worldly affairs, students of their fellowmen, not
theorists nor dreamers.. They must be brave men, physically as
well as morally.. They must be as incorruptible as honor, as
stainless as purity, men whom no force can frighten, no
influence coerce, no money buy...
Better abandon this priceless possession, admit ourselves
incompetent to do our part in the world-redeeming work of our
imperial race; better now haul down the flag of arduous deeds
for civilization and run up the flag of reaction and decay than
to apply academic notions of self-government to these children
or attempt their government by any but the most perfect
administrators our country can produce...
It is not true that charity begins at home.. Selfishness begins
there; but charity begins abroad and ends in its full glory in
the home...England's miracle is in Egypt, surpassing the ancient
ones of turning rods in serpents because the modern miracles
turn serpents into men, desserts into gardens, famine into
plenty--England's work in the land of the sphinx has solved its
profound riddle, exalted not England only, but all the world by
its noble example, and thrilled to the soul every citizen of
Great Britain with civic pride in the achievements of the
greatest civilizing empire of the world.. "Cast thy bread upon
the waters and after many days it shall return to you!" "With
what measure ye meet, it shall be meeted to you again."
Mr. President, self-government and internal development have
been the dominant notes of our first century; administration and
the development of other lands will be the dominant notes of our
second century.. And administration is as high and holy a
function as self-government, just as the care of a trust estate
is as sacred an obligation as the management of our own
concerns.. Cain was the first to violate the divine law of human
society which makes of us our brother's keeper.. And
administration of good government is the first lesson in
self-government, that exalted estate toward which all
civilization tends..
Administration of good government is not denial of liberty.. For
what is liberty? It is not savagery.. It is not the exercise of
individual will.. It is not dictatorship.. It involves
government, but not necessarily self-government.. It means law..
First of all, it is a common rule of action, applying equally to
all within its limits.. Liberty means protection of property and
life without price, free speech without intimidation, justice
without purchase or delay, government without favor or
favorites.. What will best give all this to the people of the
Philippines--American administration, developing them gradually
toward self-government, or self-government by a people before
they know what self-government means?
...The Constitution declares that "Congress shall have power to
dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations respecting
the territory belonging to the United States." Not the Northwest
Territory only; not Louisiana or Florida only; not territory on
this continent only but any territory anywhere belonging to the
nation.
...power to administer government anywhere and in any manner the
situation demands would have been in Congress if the
Constitution had been silent; not merely because it is a power
not reserved to the States or people; not merely because it is a
power inherent in and an attribute of nationality; not even
because it might be inferred from other specific provision of
the Constitution; but because it is the power most necessary for
the ruling provisions of our race--the tendency to explore,
expand, and grow, to sail new seas and seek new lands, subdue
the wilderness, revitalize decaying peoples, and plant civilized
and civilizing governments all over the globe...
Mr. President, this question is deeper than any question of
party politics; deeper than any question of the isolated policy
of our country even; deeper even than any question of
constitutional power.. It is elemental.. It is racial.. God has
not been preparing the English-speaking and Teutonic peoples for
a thousand years for nothing but vain and idle
self-contemplation and self-admiration.. No! He has made us the
master organizers of the world to establish system where chaos
reigns.. He has given us the spirit of progress to overwhelm the
forces of reaction throughout the earth.. He has made us adepts
in government that we may administer government among savage and
senile peoples.. Were it not for such a force as this the world
would relapse into barbarism and night.. And of all our race..
He has marked the American people as His chosen nation to
finally lead in the regeneration of the world.. This is the
divine mission of America, and it holds for us all the profit,
all the glory, all the happiness possible to man.. We are
trustees of the world's progress, guardians of its righteous
peace.. The judgment of the Master is upon us: "Ye have been
faithful over a few things; I will make you ruler over many
things."
What shall history say of us? Shall it say that we renounced
that holy trust, left the savage to his base condition, the
wilderness to the reign of waste, deserted duty, abandoned
glory, forget our sordid profit even, because we feared our
strength and read the charter of our powers with the doubter's
eye and the quibbler's mind? Shall it say that, called by events
to captain and command the proudest, ablest, purest race of
history in history's noblest work, we declined that great
commission? Our fathers would not have had it so.. No! They
founded no paralytic government, incapable of the simplest acts
of administration.. They planted no sluggard people, passive
while the world's work calls them.. They established no
reactionary nation.. They unfurled no retreating flag.
That flag has never paused in its onward march.. Who dares halt
it now--now, when history's largest events are carrying it
forward; now, when we are at last one people, strong enough for
any task, great enough for any glory destiny can bestow?.. Blind
indeed is he who sees not the hand of God in events so vast, so
harmonious, so benign.. Reactionary indeed is the mind that
perceives not that this vital people is the strongest of the
saving forces of the world; that our place, therefore, is at the
head of the constructing and redeeming nations of the earth; and
that to stand aside while events march on is a surrender of our
interests, a betrayal of our duty as blind as it is base..
Craven indeed is the heart that fears to perform a work so
golden and so noble; that dares not win a glory so immortal..
Do you tell me that it will cost us money? When did Americans
ever measure duty by financial standards? Do you tell me of the
tremendous toil required to overcome the vast difficulties of
our task? What mighty work for the world, for humanity, even for
ourselves has ever been done with ease? ...Do you remind me of
the precious blood that must be shed, the lives that must be
given, the broken hearts of loved ones for their slain? And this
is indeed a heavier price than all combined.. And, yet, as a
nation, every historic duty we have done, every achievement we
have accomplished has been by the sacrifice of our noblest
sons.. Every holy memory that glorifies the flag is of those
heroes who have died that its onward march might not be
stayed...That flag is woven of heroism and grief, of the bravery
of men and women's tears, of righteousness and battle, of
sacrifice and anguish, of triumph and of glory.. It is these
which make our flag a holy thing.. Who would tear from that
sacred banner the glorious legends of a single battle where it
has waved on land or sea?
...In the cause of civilization, in the service of the republic
anywhere on earth, Americans consider wounds the noblest
decorations man can win, and count the giving of their lives a
glad and precious duty..
Pray God that spirit never falls.. Pray God the time may never
come when Mammon and the love of ease shall so debase our blood
that we will fear to shed it for the flag and its imperial
destiny.. Pray God the time may never come when American heroism
is but a legend like the story of the Cid.. American faith in
our mission and our might a dream dissolved, and the glory of
our mighty race departed..
And that time will never come.. We will renew our youth at the
fountain of new and glorious deeds.. We will exalt our reverence
for the flag by carrying it to a noble future as well as by
remembering its ineffable past.. Its immortality will not pass,
because everywhere and always we will acknowledge and discharge
the solemn responsibilities our sacred flag, in its deepest
meaning, puts upon us.. And so, Senators, with reverent hearts,
where dwells the fear of God, the American people move forward
to the future of their hope and the doing of His work..
Mr. President and Senators, adopt the resolution offered that
peace may quickly come and that we may begin our saving,
regenerating, and uplifting work.. Adopt it, and this bloodshed
will cease when these deluded children of our islands learn that
this is the final word of the representatives of the American
people in Congress assembled.. Reject it, and the world, history
and the American people will know where to forever fix the awful
responsibility for the consequences that will surely follow such
failure to do our manifest duty..
How dare we delay when our soldiers' blood is flowing?
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