Reflection on Trans-national America:
It is true the Great War brought out anger we could never understand short of being in New York (the heart of immigration at the time). In 1903 the new colossus was placed on the Statue of Liberty representing our melting pot of a nation and embracing our immigrant population. This is being written just thirteen years later talking about how quickly the Americas are starting to drift away from that fundamental idea because of suspicions due to the war. Ostracizing the Germans trying to make them assimilate to what we believed is American. The writer notes while at the same time making them preserve their European traditions more and more pushing them together. The writer asked the question of how can a melting pot be a melting pot if we are pushed away from one another? The writer tells America that we must be the example for the world to follow, America cannot slip into becoming an "inferior civilizations." Telling the readers that they should not be ashamed of Anglo Saxon immigrants but be proud "of the heroic toil and heroic sacrifices." The writer is pleading to America that this war does not divide us but instead unifies us for.
It is true the Great War brought out anger we could never understand short of being in New York (the heart of immigration at the time). In 1903 the new colossus was placed on the Statue of Liberty representing our melting pot of a nation and embracing our immigrant population. This is being written just thirteen years later talking about how quickly the Americas are starting to drift away from that fundamental idea because of suspicions due to the war. Ostracizing the Germans trying to make them assimilate to what we believed is American. The writer notes while at the same time making them preserve their European traditions more and more pushing them together. The writer asked the question of how can a melting pot be a melting pot if we are pushed away from one another? The writer tells America that we must be the example for the world to follow, America cannot slip into becoming an "inferior civilizations." Telling the readers that they should not be ashamed of Anglo Saxon immigrants but be proud "of the heroic toil and heroic sacrifices." The writer is pleading to America that this war does not divide us but instead unifies us for.
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