[The Crime Against Europe by Roger Casement]@TWC D-Link bookThe Crime Against Europe CHAPTER VIII 6/15
German effort, then, would be plainly directed to creating an Ireland satisfied with the change, and fully determined to maintain it. And it might be remembered that Germany is possibly better equipped, intellectually and educationally, for the task of developing Ireland than even 20th century England.
She has already faced a remarkable problem, and largely solved it in her forty years' administration of Alsace-Lorraine.
There is a province torn by force from the bleeding side of France and alien in sentiment to her new masters to a degree that Ireland could not be to any changes of authority imposed upon her from without, has, within a short lifetime, doubled in prosperity and greatly increased her population, despite the open arms and insistent call of France, and despite a rule denounced from the first as hateful. However hateful, the Prussian has proved himself an able administrator and an honest and most capable instructor.
In his strong hands Strasburg has expanded from being an ill-kept, pent-in French garrison town to a great and beautiful city.
Already a local Parliament gives to the population a sense of autonomy, while the palace and constant presence of an Imperial prince affirms the fact that German Imperialism, far from engrossing and centralizing all the activities and powers of the empire in Berlin, recognizes that German nationality is large enough and great enough to admit of many capitals, many individualities, and many separate State growths within the sure compass of one great organism. That an Ireland severed by force of arms from the British Empire and annexed to the German Empire would be ill-governed by her new masters is inconceivable.
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