Session #57 · 1901–03

Speech #570041780

Secretary of State under President Grant. uses this lanhistorical and analytical review of the variant conditions which have existed g na e: in the United States and China since the first treatieswere signed in regard "he control of the people within its limits and the right to expel from its to the treatment f is would not ho difficult to show that from the territory persons who are dangerous to the peace of the state are too clearly outset the position of the foreigner in China has been one of violation and within the essential attributes of sovereignty to he seriously contested. exclusion. his rights being limited under treaties to certain specified objects Strangers visiting or sojourning in a foreign country voluntarily submit within the narrow limits of the treaty ports. and extended only at the will themselves to the laws and customs. and the municipal laws of France anof the Chinese Government to residence and travel in the interior. The thorizing the expulsion of stragrs are not of such recent date. nor has the rent byi r cexercise of the power by the Government of France been so ifreqnent. that inherent right of that Empire to regulate the domicile and busness of aliensertnt within its borders by solicitiiig and obtaining from China the limited privi- force." logos expressed by the formal treaties and the expianded privileges grow Mi pr d n ot ild te p i s out of them . N or would it be difficult to argue w ith convincing force that r r s d n .I d o h n h oi y o h sb l a e S c the application of this right by China is governed in its manifestations by cessflly questioned. either from the standpoint of the interests the inherent immiscibilty of the Mongolian and Caucasian races. As are all of our own people. or from the standpoint of that comity which Europeans to the native Chinese communities. so are the Chinese to the communities of European blooda people apart. not willing to be engrafted we owe to the Government and the people of China. We have upon thenational life. and dwellngunder the special liceuse ofan artificilly a perfect fight. without offending against any just demand of created necessity.
Identified stereotypes
The Chinese are described as inherently immiscible with Caucasian races and unwilling to be engrafted upon national life.
Keywords matched
Mongolian

Classification

Target group
Sentiment
Negative
Stereotyping
⚠️ Yes
Confidence
100%
Model
gemini-2.0-flash
Framing
Cultural threat Legal / procedural

Speaker & context

Speaker
Unknown
Party
Chamber
State
Gender
Date
Speech ID
570041780
Paragraph
#2
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