Defending the Judeo-Christian ethic, limited government, & the American Constitution
Monday May 28th 2012
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Books by our contributors

From the Editor

"Dark Rose" by Steve Farrell “An enchanting story of faith and family that is as enlightening as it is encouraging.” -- Jon Dougherty, World Net Daily
"The most riveting, thought provoking book I've read in years." --Jeffrey Bennett, talk show host, World Wide Christian Radio

“…bursting with lessons in faith, forgiveness and family…it is a modern classic that will be enjoyed and passed along to friends and family for years to come.” -- Shane Cory, Washington Dispatch
"Destined to be a timeless classic, Dark Rose will touch the heart and bring hope to all who read it." -- NewsMax.com

The Panama Canal: A Brief History

American Minute with Bill Federer

The Panama Canal Zone was acquired by the U.S. for ten million dollars on FEBRUARY 23, 1904.

Proposed by Spain as early as 1534 so as to not have to sail around the Strait of Magellan, France began building a sea-level canal in 1880, led by Ferdinand de Lesseps, builder of the Suez Canal, but landslides from tropical rains and tropical diseases of malaria and yellow fever caused the effort to be abandoned.

Dr. Walter Reed of the U.S. Army, had researched in Cuba in 1899 after the Spanish-American War, and confirmed the discovery of Dr. Carlos Finlay that mosquitoes were the carriers of malaria and yellow fever, resulting in improved public sanitation measures which allowed construction in Panama to be feasible.

In 1903, the United States helped Panama gain its independence from Columbia.

Planned by President William McKinley, construction on the Panama Canal began under President Theodore Roosevelt, who decided on a canal system using a lake with three tiers of locks instead of a sea-level canal.

Inventions such as railroads, steam shovels, steam-powered cranes, hydraulic rock crushers, cement mixers, dredges, pneumatic power drills and electric motors, technology largely developed and built in the United States, were used to create the largest dam and the largest man-made lake (Gatun Lake) in the world at that time.

On December 6, 1912, President William Taft addressed Congress:

“Our defense of the Panama Canal, together with our enormous world trade and our missionary outposts on the frontiers of civilization, require us to recognize our position as one of the foremost in the family of nations, and to clothe ourselves with sufficient naval power to give force to our reasonable demands, and to give weight to our influence in those directions of progress that a powerful Christian nation should advocate.”

On October 23, 1913, President Woodrow Wilson stated in his Thanksgiving Proclamation:

“We have seen the practical completion of a great work at the Isthmus of Panama which not only exemplifies the nation’s abundant capacity of its public servants but also promises the beginning of a new age of co-operation and peace.

‘Righteousness exalteth a nation’ and ‘peace on earth, good will towards men’ furnish the only foundation upon which can be built the lasting achievements of the human spirit.”

The Panama Canal was opened August 15, 1914, the same year World War I began. The largest American engineering project to that date, it had cost the United States $375,000,000 (roughly $10 billion today) and 5,600 American lives.

On March 31, 1976, California Governor Ronald Reagan stated:

“Well, the Canal Zone is not a colonial possession. It is not a long-term lease. It is sovereign United States Territory every bit the same as Alaska and all the states that were carved from the Louisiana Purchase…

We bought it, we paid for it, we built it, and we intend to keep it.”

President Jimmy Carter gave away the Panama Canal in 1977, and today passage through the ports at either end, Balboa and Cristobal, is effectively controlled by China’s Huchinson Whampoa’s Panama Ports Company.


Bill FedererThe Moral Liberal contributing editor, William J. Federer, is the bestselling author of “Backfired: A Nation Born for Religious Tolerance no Longer Tolerates Religion,” and numerous other books. A frequent radio and television guest, his daily American Minute is broadcast nationally via radio, television, and Internet. Check out all of Bill’s books here.