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i need it fast because its for my history class

2007-05-19 06:36:54 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Homework Help

7 answers

He gave two major pieces of advice in his farwell address...

1 - Not to split up into political parties - He felt this would cause a divide in the nation and that politics would no longer be about what people believed, but about what parties believed

2- Do not engage in alliances with nations during peace time as this will only drag us into their conflicts - Washington believed in isoliationism - After the French helped us in the Revolution he refused to send aid to the French during their revolutionary war stating that it wasn't our conflict to get involved with.

2007-05-19 07:16:10 · answer #1 · answered by jscalice292 2 · 4 3

Pres. Washington warned against foreign alliances and political parties, which was somewhat ironic because politically, although he officially never joined a party, his policies and way of thinking had a distinct Federalist tilt and he thouroughly rejected most of the ideas of the Jeffersonians. I think the emergence of political parties between the Federalists and the Republicans was already a foregone conclusion when he gave his farewell address

Also, about alliances, we fefused aid to France during the Revolution primarily because we made the alliance with France while Louis XVI was in power and now a completly different French government was asking us to come to their aid and this is why Washington refused to help France's fight vs. England and why he became wary of foreign alliances.

2007-05-19 09:00:39 · answer #2 · answered by jamisonshuck 4 · 1 2

4. i've got self belief his genuinely words have been to stay away from "entangling alliances" with the ecu powers. it is critical view Washington's suggestion in context. We had basically gained our freedom from England by way of France. there have been many that needed to best chum with France as a results of fact of that (and not without reason, England would not provide up quickly attempting to undermine the U. S. till after the conflict of 1812). that's what Washington became commonly cautioning against. for people who might use his words to sell an isolationist schedule in right this moment's international, evaluate: in those days a trans-Atlantic holiday took weeks, and that became additionally the quickest verbal substitute. right this moment a airplane crosses the Atlantic in some hours, an ICBM in minutes, and communications are stay in genuine time. the international is a plenty smaller and greater interdependent place than it became 2 hundred years in the past. additionally, do those self same human beings propose we abide by utilising each and every of the techniques of the previous due 18th Century, or basically this one as a results of fact they like it?

2016-11-25 00:47:04 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Here's a website containing an abstract from his address:

http://www.earlyamerica.com/earlyamerica/milestones/farewell/

You can also view the full text. Just click on the option.

2007-05-19 06:46:42 · answer #4 · answered by MathBioMajor 7 · 1 2

The best answer is correct, but he also advised the USA to say out of national debt

2016-03-15 07:47:37 · answer #5 · answered by Broc Lapointe 1 · 1 0

washington warned the country about foriegn allies and not to get in others business with conflicts. but i guess bush hasnt learned any thing from our fore fathers hope this helps

2007-05-19 11:07:36 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

well 9 years later...lol

2016-01-27 13:20:15 · answer #7 · answered by erica 1 · 0 0

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