Expanding the country As a young country, the United States has a desire to become a true American continent that spreads west and extends from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. A variety of strategic and economic factors wish expansion to the West. According to John O'Sullivan, Hestedt is cited in Manifest Destiny 2004; "The United States has a fate to spread the continent assigned by Providence to millions of years of free development each year" (ΒΆ 2). When Americans entered the west to settle the border, their inherent advantage of faith, culture, and democratic principles followed them.
The concept of 'clear fate' in the United States is the occupation of the whole North American continent and the sacred right of the American people. Manifesto Destiny is based on beliefs about the cultural and racial superiorities of other countries and obligations to bring enlightenment and civilization to other races such as American Indians. The belief in the fate of American rule proves the dark side of the expansion of the West. The picture on the right is a picture depicting the concept of Westward Expansion and Manifest Destiny. It was painted in 1872 by John Gust (1842-1893) and is known as the "frontier spirit" of American progress. This picture shows how various kinds of vehicles guided and protected by the goddess of Colombia are moved to the west as a symbol of America to hold a book of knowledge and enlightenment.
For territory and future land acquisition prospects, Americans use Manifesto Destiny's idea to protect the movement to the West and the treatment of Native Americans. Manifesto Destiny's idea was created directly by the discovery used in Europe and industrial chemistry; the direct relationship from the trial case Johnson to Manstosh proved this direct relationship is correct. The term "obvious fate" has never actually been used in 1845, but this idea is always implied
The destiny of America and the massacre of the fate of the American Indians List are used to express the assertion that the mission of the United States is to expand the border and thereby spread its form of democracy and freedom. Originally the political slogan of the 19th century "clear destiny" eventually became a standard historical term and was often used as a synonym for US territory expansion from the Pacific to North America. The U.S. government considers it to prevent Native Americans from achieving manifesto Destiny (or at least to prevent manifesto Destiny's ideas from being used to acquire land and land)