Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Americas Occupation of Puerto Rico :: American History
Americas Occupation of Puerto RicoOn July 25, 1898, American troops guide by worldwide Nelson Miles landed at Guanica and began the military invasion of Puerto Rico. within three days, Miles and his troops secured the city of Ponce and rendered a Spanish repudiate a matter of time. Although the Island was taken by force and placed under martial law, the general re get alongion to the United States invasion was very more positive. In fact, the Puerto Rican people admired U.S. political and economic ideals so lots that one local newspaper told its readers, from a people who are posterity of Washington, no one should expect a sad surprise ... we trust, with bountiful confidence in the great Republic and the men who govern her. 1 unluckily that confidence was short lived, as the realities of American political and economic agendas situate in and led Puerto Rico to be stranded in a sea of ambiguity, racism, audacity and indifference. 2 U.S. occupation of Puerto Rico was marked b y crude(a) contradictions of so-called American ideals pertaining to new and realised policies that were extended to Puerto Rico and these contradictions have had dark and long-lasting effects on the development of the island politically, economically and socially. In 1897, Spain established self-government in Puerto Rico and the people drafted a composition. One form later, the Spanish would cede Puerto Rico to the United States and that constitution would go essentially unrecognized. On the island, the local politicians realized that through fate of war and the force of arms, their constitution was ... irrelevant. 3 Although the islanders lost their constitution, their confidence in the U.S. coupled with a pledge from General Miles, in which he describes the U.S. goal as, ...to promote your prosperity, and to bestow upon you the immunities and the blessings of the liberal institutions of our government, 4 had them expecting to ultimately write a new and improved constitutio n as presently as the military government was abolished. Unfortunately, while the Puerto Rican people patiently waited for the large(p) Republic to deliver liberty, the Americans argued for almost two years about what to do with their new possession. On April 12, 1900, President McKinley signed the Foraker Act (also known as the first organic act) into law and sealed the political fate of the Puerto Rican people. The act called for a Governor, an Executive Council, and a House of Delegates to govern the island.
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