Some authors like Rudyard Kipling argued the US and England had an obligation to conquer and civilize "less evolved" societies.
In addition to it being implicit in a lot of his work, check out the poem "White Man's Burden" for a fairly explicit statement of this thesis. It's pretty racist by today's standards, but arguably it's essentially the same concept as (say) the Peace Corps.
Kipling attempted to justify new Imperialism by asserting the moral responsibility of Western powers to civilize and uplift the "less developed" societies they encountered. He popularized the idea of the "White Man's Burden," arguing that it was the duty of advanced nations to bring progress and order to the rest of the world.
Rudyard Kipling doesn't pass judgment on Imperialism as good or bad. He treats it more as inescapable. The "benevolent" protector looking after a native population incapable of taking care of themselves is presented as an extension of the "natural order" of things
Scientific racism
With volume, you get economies of scale which can carry the high costs of developing a new model. MG-Rover's 107,000 cars alone could not justify carrying all the overhead necessary to justify new models. Without new models, sales fell. The attempt to forge an alliance was an attempt to escape from this vicious circle.
Edward Kipling was born on August 21, 1879, in New York City, New York, USA.
The four motives for New Imperialism were: Economic. Strategic, Humanitarian, and Foreign Investment.
Industrialization was brought to the countries that were taken over by Imperialism such as new ways of thinking and new ideas.
The four motives for New Imperialism were: Economic. Strategic, Humanitarian, and Foreign Investment.
New York City USA
Ravi's lizard, Mrs. Kipling, is an Asian water monitor.
Basically, the Naval Act of 1890 was passed by Congress to grant money for construction of more naval ships. At the time, imperialism and the new Manifest Destiny were big in America. These are the types of arguments Congress used to justify the act.
New Trade Routes
America needed new markets for its goods, not a source of raw material for industries
to look for new land and to find new material.