How a Letter of a Country Lawyer Became International Law

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How a Letter of a Country Lawyer Became International Law
William C William Chapin Deming
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It is especially our duty, for it is rig-ht at our door.
2. We owe it to our citizens in Cuba to afford them that protection and indemnity for life and property which no government there can or will afford and to that end to terminate the conditions that deprive them of legal protection.
3. The right to intervene may be justified by the very serious injury to the commerce, trade and business of our people and by the wanton destruction of prop- erty and devastation of the island.
4. And which is
... of the utmost importance. The present condition of affairs in Cuba is a constant men- ace to our peace and entails upon this government an enormous expense. With such a conflict waged for years in an island so near us and with which our people have such trade and business relations — when the lives and liberty of our citizens are in constant danger and their property destroyed and themselves ruined — where our trading vessels are liable to seizure and are seized at our very door by warships of a foreign nation, the expeditions of filibustering that we are powerless — 9— to prevent altcg-ether, and the irritatinof questions and entanglements thus arising- — all these and others that, 1 need not mention, with the resulting strained rela- tions are a constant menace to our peace and compel us to keep on a semi-war footing with a nation with which we are at peace.

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