World War I: The Modern American Peace Movement

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For many "US Americans" to intervene in World War I and the conflict itself in fact was a war of choice rather than necessity. World War I was born the "modern" American peace movement, which represents a definite shift of pre-war peace activity in goals, methods, and membership. Unlike the pre-1914 movement, the modern peace movement, advocating peace and social justice, was a popular resistance effort characterized by a liberal and radical citizen of peace activists and women's peace organizations and a progressive reformist push. Unlike its predecessors in the nineteenth century, the modern peace movement was more secular and secular and religious peace activists alike were more aware of the economic causes of the war and were more willing …show more content…

Peace to war anti-Christian advocates and enlightenment moral education that peace. From civil war to World War I, the US peace movement adopted a "global" and "practical" view. 2 Led by male lawyers and businessmen and supported by middle-class professionals and social elites, the 1914 Peace Movement is respectable, reformed, practical, and less dependent on human religiousism. It aims to settle disputes and maintain the global order not through ethical nonresistance but through international peacekeeping, including international law, arbitration, conciliation and the International Court of …show more content…

Moreover, they warned that the empire would erode American democratic values and distract the nation from the most pressing needs of internal reform. At the same time, the Philippines, the presidency of Emilio Aginaldo, launched a revolt against the American base in order to win national independence. The Anglo-American War (1899-1902), brutal barbaric guerrilla warfare, scorched earth campaigns, and torture. The Arab Imperial League became a national movement with broad support, which some members joined 30,000 before declining after the 1900 elections. 1914 Some of the 45 new peace organizations emerged. Including the American Society of International Law, the World Peace Foundation and the Carnegie Endowment for International

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