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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 11 page overview of the factors that are important in maintaining our status as a world power. The author suggests that we must correct the growing separation between rich and poor, reestablish respect for our government, and strive to become one united America verses a country that is separated by concepts such as globalism and multiculturalism. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
11 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPusFut2.rtf
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In becoming the pre-eminent world power in the latter half of the 20th century the U.S. has followed in the footsteps of just a few
other great historical powers. Those that come immediately to mind, of course, include Rome, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union. In ways unique to them individually each of these
previous powers ultimately failed in fulfilling the role that they set out to fulfill. Many question whether the U.S. can escape the same fate. To do so will
require a revamping not just in the way we externally relate with the world but with the way that we relate internally among our own citizens and our governmental officials.
In pursuing this discussion it is important to note that being an American in 2006 is considerably different than being an
American in 1776 or even in 1936. The factors which have shaped past and existing American political identity are many and varied. Many of these factors of course
revolve around the face of our government itself and the factors influencing this governments interactions with both the people of this and other countries and with the governments of other
countries. This interaction has changed considerably over the years as has the political identity of this country and how it is perceived both by its citizens, those of other
countries, and the government of other countries. There have been numerous political shifts in U.S. government over its brief two-hundred year
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