The ways of peace are in kept agreements.
Editor's note · Context
Address on Foreign Policy and the International Court of Justice Intended for Delivery in San Francisco, California
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If there are no property rights, there is little, if any, foundation for national rights, which we are ever being called upon to safeguard.
Those who were sure that our salvation lay in the destruction of organized labor and the precipitated reduction of wages have found that the national administration was not disposed to Acquiesce in their program.
I have thus far made no allusion to the hungering of humanity for new assurances that the world may be equally blessed. Peace ought to be the supreme blessing to all mankind.
I am quite aware that there were some who imagined, before the present administration was voted into responsibility, that it was going at least to acquiesce if not definitely sympathize with projects for the deflation of labor and the…





