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My countrymen,
the pioneers to whom I have alluded,
these stalwart makers of America,
could have no conception of our
present day attainment. Hamilton,
who conceived, and Washington, who
sponsored, little dreamed of either
a development or a solution like
ours of today. But they were right
in fundamentals. They knew what
was faith, and preached security.
One may doubt if either of them,
if any of the founders, would wish
America to hold aloof from the world.
But there has come to us lately
a new realization of the menace
to our America in European entanglements
which emphasizes the prudence of
Washington, though he could little
have dreamed the thought which is
in my mind.
When I sat
on the Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations and listened to American
delegations appealing in behalf
of kinsman or old home folks across
the seas, I caught the aspirations
of nationality, and the perfectly
natural sympathy among kindred in
this republic. But I little realized
then how we might rend the concord
of American citizenship in our seeking
to solve Old World problems. There
have come to me, not at all unbecomingly,
the expressed anxieties of Americans
foreign born who are asking our
country's future attitude on territorial
awards in the adjustment of peace.
They are Americans all, but they
have a proper and a natural interest
in the fortunes of kinsfolk and
native lands. One cannot blame them.
If our land is to settle the envies,
rivalries, jealousies, and hatreds
of all civilization, these adopted
sons of the Republic want the settlement
favorable to the land from which
they came.
The misfortune
is not alone that it rends the concord
of nations. The greater pity is
that it rends the concord of our
citizenship at home. It's folly
to think of blending Greek and Bulgar,
Italian and Slovak, or making any
of them rejoicingly American, when
the land of adoption sits in judgement
on the land from which he came.
We need to be rescued from divisionary
and fruitless pursuit of peace through
super government. I do not want
Americans of foreign birth making
their party alignments on what we
mean to do for some nation in the
old world. We want them to be Republican
because of what we mean to do for
the United States of America. Our
call is for unison, not rivaling
sympathies. Our need is concord,
not the antipathies of long inheritance.
Surely no
one stops to think where the great
world experiment was leading. Frankly,
no one could know. We're only learning
now. It would be a sorry day for
this republic if we allowed our
activities in seeking for peace
in the Old World to blind us to
the essentials of peace at home.
We want a free America again. We
want America free at home, and free
in the world. We want to silence
the outcry of nation against nation,
in the fullness of understanding.
And we wish to silence the cry of
class against class, and stifle
the party appeal to class, so that
we may ensure tranquility in our
own freedom. If I could choose but
one, I had rather have industrial
and social peace at home, than command
the international peace of all the
world.
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