He believed that the U.S. had a moral obligation to promote democracy in Latin America. He also believed that mending fences with Colombia was necessary. Based on the so-called "bad deal" of the Panama Canal, Wilson sent Colombia several million dollars.
Woodrow Wilson believed the United States had a moral obligation to promote democracy in Latin America.
I believe it was President Wilson.
believe it or not it waz a sheep because i learned that earlier today!
Edith Wilson was the wife of President Woodrow Wilson. After he had a stroke, Edith was given the nickname "America's First Woman President."
i believe because George Washington was the president of the United States of America.
# United States should intervene when necessary to protect its interests in Latin America # United States should intervene when necessary to protect its interests in Latin America
Yes, I believe so.
Barack Obama, John Kennedy, Franklin Roosevelt, Teddy Roosevelt, Rutherford Hayes, and John and John Q Adams.
No
Woodrow Wilson worked to get the League of Nations started and tried very hard without success, to get the US to join it.
Woodrow Wilson's administration signed treaties with thirty Latin American nations to provide a means for quickly addressing conflicts. Attempting to soothe lingering ill-feelings in Colombia over Theodore Roosevelt's encouraging the Panamanian revolution of 1903, Wilson negotiated a treaty with reparations, but it was rejected by the U.S. Senate. Under Wilson, the United States tried but was unsuccessful in bringing stability to Nicaragua, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic. The United States had to intervene and maintain military occupation in Haiti and the Dominican Republic in 1915 and 1916.
"The business of America is business." Calvin Coolidge
Bank of America Corp. Philosophy, similar to a Mission Statement:"We believe, very simply, that it is the actions of individuals working together that build strong communities, and that business has an obligation to support those actions in the communities it serves."