Similarities Between Presidents Wilson And Taft

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“Times change, and we change with them.” William Henry Harrison. Time changes constantly and adaptations continue throughout human history. Term after term, presidents and policy makers plan and implement ways to handle, address, or confront, our neighboring nations. Throughout American history the perspective of foreign policies has been one that waivers far and wide between presidents Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and Woodrow Wilson.
Theodore Roosevelt, also known as Teddy, was the 26th President of the United States. He became commonly known with his “Big Stick diplomacy”. Meaning to speak with thought but follow through with hard action. This would aid in potentially achieving any goals set. For example, the president's interest in creating the Panama Canal as well …show more content…

He was known for his Dollar Diplomacy, the idea that banks & businesses should give loans to foreign countries to create better international relations. He did this in sales of military machinery, but it quickly led to failure. Taft never lived up to the expectation that was set before him by Roosevelt, and he carried that with him everyday of his life. Even still, he was able to establish the 16th amendment, income taxes, and the 17th amendment, U.S. senators directly elected by voters. This gave the people a way to continue expanding their unalienable “rights.”
Woodrow Wilson was the 28th President of the United States. His approach to foreign policies was isolationism, leading him to become known as “the man who kept us out of war.” He valued moral diplomacy, while this was great in a sense of self-determination and the peoples moral rights, one cannot avoid problems forever. Knowing this he decided to try to show other foreign countries how to implement democratic governments with self-determination. Wilson was only a temporary solution to a dam that was going to break, giving him short term success, but long term

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