As one of the important imperial power in the history, the United States expanded its country across the continent. Some voice in think the country should establish an overseas empire just like the Europeans for colonial development and procurement. But others preferred to increase the country's interest and influence through extensive trade and investments instead, rather than through military occupation. Still others advocated a cultural expansionism in which the nation exported its ideals and institutions. Social Darwinism played a key role in America’s imperialism. Knowledgeable people like scholars and politicians made ideological arguments that the United States should expand government regulation, larger the monetary market and seeking …show more content…
Even a foreign trade policy was made to promise national prosperity because almost all Americans favored economic expansion: more markets for manufacturers and farmers, greater profits for merchants and bankers, more jobs for workers. (Goldfield pg. 634) During that time, Mahanism was established by Alfred Thayer Mahan, which he indicated that the United States has to stop the isolation and “begin to look outward”. Hawaii was a key for its strategic position; as the United States wanted to extend the power and influence, overthrow the Island’s Queen. The Memoir of Queen Liliuokalani was published and said, “as they deal with me and my people, kindly, generously, and justly, so may the Great Ruler of all nations deal with the grand and glorious nation of the United States of America.”(Liliuokalani pg. 532) As the United States was expanding, which also engage wars with other countries. With the success of the Spanish-American War, the Filipinos soon face the same American imperial impulse. “Did America recognize this fact, she would cease to be the laughing stock of other civilized nations, as she became when she abandoned her traditions and set up a double standard of government – government by consent in America, government by force in the Philippine Islands…” (Vigilans pg.