[The Audacious War by Clarence W. Barron]@TWC D-Link book
The Audacious War

CHAPTER XVI
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Egypt, Palestine, and Asia Minor are hereafter to be restored in fertility and give a new civilization to the shores of the eastern Mediterranean.
Is it to be assumed that with the new development for Africa and Asia, Europe is going to abandon her interest on the continents of America?
Will not the very force of these developments make a foundation for European developments in North and South America?
Have we not seen that the British Empire has still some interest in the Panama canal?
Is it to be supposed that when peace succeeds in Europe, and the European nations lie down together for another period of mutual development, France will make no inquiry concerning her $800,000,000 of property in Mexico?
Or that England will adopt Mr.Bryan's idea that any Englishman or American who goes into Mexico cannot look for any protection from his home government?
I believe that Lord Cowdray is to-day the foremost business man in England.

He represents oil lands in Mexico worth intrinsically more than $100,000,000.

Is it the policy of the British government to say, "Cowdray, forget it, and come over and develop Mesopotamia; living is unsettled in Mexico, and Uncle Sam has told 'em to fight it out"?
A third lesson the United States will receive from this war is the value of large units in business and the value of national wealth as national defense.
Instead of trying to pull down wealth and individual accretions of wealth, the country will recognize that all savings and every increment of fortune, small or large, are for the ultimate benefit and for the prosperity and defense of the whole country.
In this war Russia is poor in railroads, and the advantage that Germany has held over her in Poland is more by reason of the German railways than the German armies.

Railways are products of wealth and individual capital, and the sooner the United States learns this lesson, the better.
A fourth lesson for the United States from this war is the value of gold in bank reserves, and the value of ability to mobilize quickly such reserves.

No nation in the world to-day is more closely tied to every other nation than by the invisible strings of gold.


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