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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page overview of the rise of the U.S. to international power. The paper begins with the ideals of the forefathers, leading to the inventions rising out of the Industrial Revolution and continuing through World War II (a-bomb), telecommunications, computer technology, military technology and the space program. The paper includes a discussion of some of the problems that have emerged as a result of democratization of communist and socialist states and how the United States is working to assist those countries in the move to the global market. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Uspower.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
ability to seek individual freedom in the name of capitalistic pursuits. Franklin, as an individual, also embodied the success of that state. He was successful at everything he
put his hand too. He was an entrepreneur, scientist, inventor, statesman and diplomat and represents the beginning of the rise of the United States as an emerging world power.
The United States was founded on capitalist ideals and individuals were successful at achieving them from the outset. Whether individual ideas were behind other countries or not, the
United States caught up, then surpassed the other world powers. That trend continues today as the world moves toward democratic globalization. The
first contribution of the United States to the world was its insistence on a free society, where each individual had the right to make of himself whatever he chose to
make of himself. This has not been strictly adhered to since many minorities were left out of this loop and the problem continues today. However, many citizens of
the United States pursued their dreams and contributed their inventions to Americas rising power. To name a few since the industrial revolution, Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin which
made mass production possible; Thomas Edison invented the light bulb, the phonograph, and the process of group research; Alexander Graham Bell successfully completed intercontinental telecommunications; Edwin Drake drilled the first
oil well, which opened the door to fuel for automobiles and quicker travel; Richard Birdseye developed a method for preserving food through freezing; Richard Jordan Gatling invented the predecessor to
the machine gun, raising the stakes of war; the Wright Brothers few one of the first successful air flights, raising the capabilities in war and commercial travel; Robert Goddard launched
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