US Capitol Building
The United States of America is for all practical purposes, an empire. It has territories separated by bodies of water that are under its control, has the world’s largest economy, and it has the ability to project its force with a large and powerful military. Like other empires, the U.S. is prone to follow the historical model of an imperial rise to power and a later fall from power.
I hypothesize that the United States is on the verge of a fall from preeminence. By comparing the United States with the Roman and British Empires, I intend to research the economic causes behind the collapse of these two empires and see if the United States is in a comparable situation. If the United States is falling from power, then it has two options, accept its fate, or like the Romans and British, change course and try to continue to hold onto power as long as possible. The United States can learn something by studying the successes and mistakes made by previous world powers.
By studying older world powers, this thesis will attempt to compare current problems the U.S. faces to those problems that Rome and Great Britain faced in their respective eras. This thesis will use these two historical case studies to find solutions to some of the problems that the U.S. faces today, and make a case for how new fiscal policy as a part of a larger National Strategic Narrative might change the fate of the empire of the United States of America.
Continue scrolling for more...
https://documents.theblackvault.com/documents/financial/a556267.pdf
Follow The Black Vault on Social Media:This post was published on March 3, 2015 7:47 pm
Background Movements for civil rights were a worldwide series of political movements for equality before…
Background Welcome to the FBI Files on Historical Figures & Groups archive at The Black…
The Department of Defense has released a collection of internal emails in response to a…
Background You can get quite a bit of material under the Freedom of Information Act…
The Department of Defense (DoD) has released, through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request…
The two volumes of the TEMPS (Transportable Electromagnetic Pulse Simulator) Final Report, dated August 1973…