A major battle which has been intentionally
obscured from history books took place in the wake of Lincoln’s murder and the
re-ascension of the City of London-backed slave power' during the
decades after the Union victory of 1865. On the one hand America’s role in the
emerging global family of nations was being shaped by followers of Lincoln who
wished to usher in an age of win-win cooperation. Such an anti-Darwinian system
which Adams called “a community of principle” asserted that each nation had the
right to sovereign banking controls over private finance, productive credit
emissions tied to internal improvements with a focus on continental (rail/road)
development, industrial progress and full spectrum economies. Adherents of this
program included Russia’s Sergei Witte and Alexander II, Germany’s Otto von
Bismarck, France’s Sadi Carnot, and leading figures within Japan’s Meiji
Restoration…
MAHAN
DERAILS AMERICA'S ANTI-IMPERIAL INDENTITY
Alfred Thayer Mahan
(1840-1914) represented an opposing paradigm which true American statesmen like
Lincoln, Secretary of State James Blaine, William Seward, President Grant,
William Garfield, and McKinley
detested. Sadly, with McKinley’s murder (run by
an anarchist ring with ties to British Intelligence) and the rise of Teddy
Roosevelt in 1901, it was not Gilpin’s but rather Mahan’s worldview which
became the dominant foreign policy doctrine for the next 120 years (despite a
few brief respites under FDR and JFK).
Mahan is commonly credited
for being a co-founder of modern geopolitics and an inspiration for Halford
Mackinder. Having graduated from West Point’s naval academy in 1859, Mahan soon
became renowned as a total failure in actual combat having crashed warships
repeatedly into moving and stationary objects during the Civil War. Since
reality was not his forte, Mahan focused his post-war career on Ivory tower
theorizing gushing over maps of the world and fawning over Britain’s power as a
force of world history.
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