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U.S. History 1877-Present 5: The Monroe Doctrine and The Roosevelt Corollary 205 Views


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Description:

And henceforth, the Monroe Doctrine and Roosevelt Corollary would declare that if any outsiders reached out towards the Americas for colonization, we'd viciously slap their hands away.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

Edited at https://subtitletools.com Way back in

00:00

Way back in

00:05

1823, President Monroe [President Monroe drops seeds and 'henceforth' flowers bloom]

00:07

laid down some henceforths.

00:09

You know, love those henceforths.

00:11

In a speech to Congress, Monroe said [Monroe gives speech to Congress]

00:13

that henceforth, the U.S.

00:15

would not interfere with European

00:17

colonies and affairs.

00:19

But at the same time, he insisted that European

00:21

powers stay out of the Americas.

00:23

Specifically, he said,

00:25

the American continents are [Monroe drops seed on stage]

00:27

henceforth not to be considered

00:29

as subjects for future colonization

00:31

by European powers.

00:33

It's kinda like when a kid draws a line [Sisters arguing about boundaries in a shared bedroom]

00:35

across the floor of a shared bedroom and tells

00:37

her sister, "you stay on your side,

00:39

and I'll stay on mine. Oh, and

00:41

don't touch my stuff or I'll read your diary [Sister holds a diary and threatens to read]

00:43

to mom." Or, uh, sorta like

00:45

that, but not—because here we're talking about national

00:47

boundaries, global power, and international

00:49

political alliances. Though, uh, we're not

00:51

saying that they didn't keep diaries. Anyway, [Monroe writes in his diary]

00:53

this declaration by Monroe

00:55

ended up being called the Monroe Doctrine [Monroe announces The Monroe Doctrine]

00:57

and it influenced U.S. foreign policy for years

00:59

to come. By the 1890s,

01:01

the global situation had changed.

01:03

New forces in Central America

01:05

and South America were coming into play,

01:07

which would lead Teddy Roosevelt to give the Monroe

01:09

Doctrine an extreme makeover. [Roosevelt gives The Monroe Doctrine a makeover]

01:11

Imagine Teddy Roosevelt stepping into

01:13

the White House and being like,

01:15

"Uh, no. I want it bigger,

01:17

badder, and more imperialist.

01:19

Also, more stuffed bears [Roosevelt holds a stuffed bear]

01:21

for no reason." Yeah, that was Teddy.

01:23

A key event was the Venezuelan

01:25

Crisis of 1902.

01:27

Not to be confused with Venezuela's

01:29

other crises. Basically,

01:31

Venezuela had an eensy-weensy little

01:33

civil war, and some folks [Venezuela civil war scene]

01:35

from Europe lost money, property,

01:37

and investments they'd had in Venezuela.

01:39

So, Germany, Britain, and Italy

01:41

told the new president of Venezuela that he owed

01:43

them a ton of money for the damages [Germany, Britain, and Italy presents bill to Castro]

01:45

their citizens had suffered.

01:47

President Castro said, "Oh yeah?

01:49

Who's gonna make us pay?" To which

01:51

the Germans responded by sending a

01:53

fleet of ships to blockade Venezuela, [German fleet of ships enters scene]

01:55

and Castro was probably like,

01:57

"It was a rhetorical question! Gosh,

01:59

guys." This meant that a bunch of

02:01

boats cut off the entire country from [Boats cut off trade route]

02:03

overseas trade. Well, Castro wasn't

02:05

too worried at first, because he assumed the Monroe

02:07

Doctrine would send the U.S. of A. to his

02:09

rescue. But America shuffled

02:11

its collective feet for a while first,

02:13

since European powers weren't exactly trying [Wilhelm II plants flag]

02:15

to seize territory or re-establish

02:17

colonies or any of the stuff the Monroe

02:19

Doctrine specifically warned against.

02:21

But eventually Teddy Roosevelt took the reins

02:23

and sent a very big navy down to Venezuela. [Roosevelt sends a navy to Venezuela]

02:25

Then the Germans suddenly

02:27

decided they had better things to do. [German ships flee]

02:29

Well, Venezuela still ended up

02:31

paying fines, though, which made Teddy [Venezuela pays fines]

02:33

concerned that Europeans would see their meddling as

02:35

profitable and do it again.

02:37

So he decided the U.S. should take a stand in

02:39

similar situations. Yeah,

02:41

"taking a stand" translates to "using

02:43

the military" in Teddy-speak.

02:45

Well in his heart he was still a Rough Rider,

02:47

you know, this more aggressive foreign

02:49

policy was called the Roosevelt Corollary, [Roosevelt holds the Roosevelt corollary document]

02:51

and it made the Monroe Doctrine look like

02:53

child's play. Seems like Teddy was [Child makes a hat out of The Monroe Doctrine]

02:55

the grizzly and Monroe was actually

02:57

the, uh, teddy bear. Still,

02:59

who would want to snuggle with a bear named Monroe? [Kid screams and runs away from Monroe teddy bear]

03:01

Heh. It just isn't

03:03

the same.

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