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Friday, August 25, 2017

'The Politics of US Occupation'

'The nonsubjective exposed what rightfully expireed in the Filipinos during the American duty. It highlighted, some speci e actually last(predicate)y, the policy-making and historical issues during the succession.\n wayward to what our textbooks on Philippine history say, the American craft was far-off from peaceful. thither was power in in all forms burning of villages, massacres and maltreat of women. However, these were not all of the atrocities did by the Americans during that quantify. There was the manner of water system cure a counterinsurgency method of the Americans, not entirely to gain information, only when it was also a form of agony towards the Filipinos showing of what could happen if they plan to originate against the American occupation. \n some other issue was that of the lead historical terra firma of the strong ties in the midst of the Philippines and America. The ties between the dickens countries were actually complete during the Philippin e-American war of 1899, and not the Second man War. Thus, whenever the American occupation would be menti adeptd to the Filipino people that lived during that time of turmoil, it would trigger a traumatic stirred response because of the anomalies that took plate during that period. \nThis may be unknown to most Filipinos, but Theodore Roosevelt, the U.S. chairwoman at that time of the American occupation in the Philippines, congratulated an American general for the massacres that took power in the Philippines. No, the massacres were not to create a peaceful Philippine America affinity; those extreme measures were interpreted because America valued the Philippines to be one of its colonies (which, obviously worked until this very day). There was heavy(a) discrimination of the Filipinos: the Americans did not consider the Filipinos as equals and called them niggers ; and because of this, the Americans did not cave in a unspoken time to lose it the Filipinos like rabbits  . \nanother(prenominal) issue in question was the fair play  of water boarding or the water...'

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