Of intervening in the domestic affairs of foreign states:

There is no practice which the experience of nations more uniformly condemns, and none which governments more consistently pursue.


Quarterly Review, April 1862


There is no practice which the experience of nations more uniformly condemns, and none which governments more consistently pursue.

There is no practice which the experience of nations more uniformly condemns, and none which governments more consistently pursue.

There is no practice which the experience of nations more uniformly condemns, and none which governments more consistently pursue.

There is no practice which the experience of nations more uniformly condemns, and none which governments more consistently pursue.