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America has
chosen -- nay, she chose in 1776
-- that she intended to be democratic
in her policies and in her government.
And our whole history of more than
one hundred years justifies the
statement that our people are wedded
and devoted to the idea of international
justice as the rule upon which nations
shall live together in peace and
amity upon the earth.
So that when
we entered this war, we entered
it in order that we and our children's
children might fabricate a new and
better civilization, under better
conditions, enjoying liberty of
person, liberty of belief, freedom
of speech, and freedom as to our
political institutions. We entered
this war to remove from ourselves,
our children, and our children's
children, the menace which threatens
to deny us that right. I want to
appeal to you and to all Americans:
never during the progress of this
war let us for one instant forget
the high and holy mission with which
we entered it, no matter what the
cost, no matter what the temptation.
Let us bring out of this war the
flag of our country as untarnished
as it goes in -- sanctified and
consecrated to the establishment
of liberty, for all men who dwell
on the face of the earth.
Nobody knows
what the world is going to be like
when this war is over. No imagination
is able to picture the sort of civilization
the world will have after this conflict.
But we do know that when this war
is over, the rehabilitation of a
stricken if not paralyzed civilization
is going to be a long, drawn out,
and uphill task, and that there
will be need on every hand for trained
minds -- for trained and schooled
men.
When the
reconstruction of the world takes
place, and a finer and better civilization
has been worked out, when the human
race puts its shoulders to the wheels
of industry and begins to spread
abroad the incalculably valuable
discoveries of science, I can imagine
that a new history of the world
will begin to be written. And it
will date, I think, from this great
war, when men realize, perhaps for
the first time in a fundamental
way, that the waste in conflict
is an unrecoverable waste -- that
the upkeep of enormous armies is
too great a burden to bear -- and
that the real happiness of mankind
is based upon those peaceful pursuits
which aim to make available the
great resources of the world. When
peace comes, America will have a
special opportunity for a great
service.
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