`."System- "System gl|O-"System--@Times New Roman--- "2 x`cHankey and Self      2 xc- 2 x cDetermination    2 xfc  @Times New Roman--- 52 `cIntroduction from Chronology         2 Sc  @Times New Roman--- 2 `OcWriting in his diary, Maurice Hankey (the British cabinet secretary) said that                      2 `Octhe primary and original cause of our troubles throughout the British Empire                      2 `cwas   z2 JcPresident Wilson and his fourteen points, and his impossible doctrine of                    2 `Rcself determination which had struck at the very roots of the British Empire all                       y2 `Icover the world from Ireland to Hong Kong and had got us into a hideous                     2 `cmess.  2 c  --- 2 7`cComment    2 7c  --- 2 X` cJeffrey adds    2 Xc  k2 X@cthe following rather mild rebuke to Hankeys diary entry So it                    52 m`chad, although British policy         2 m4c- V2 m:2cmakers own inability to concede the legitimacy of                2 `Scnationalist aspirations was an additional factor exacerbating the situation. What                    72 `cJeffrey ignores is that a sub      S2 80cstantial number of British policy makers were             A2 `$cimperialists who believed that they           22 pchave a right to rule over        2 2c 2 8 clesser races   2 c  2 c  2 cand   2 ` cthat they      2 cbelonged to a       2 c 2  csuperior race     2 |c I2 )c. To give but one example, this is what            2 `OcChurchill said in March 1937 I do not admit, for instance, that a great wrong                     12 `chas been done to the Red         a2  9cIndians of America, or the black people of Australia. I                 |2 `Kcdo not admit that a wrong has been done to those people by the fact that a                     w2 `Hcstronger race, a higher grade race has come in and taken their place.                   2 c    2 5`c  ---@Times New Roman--------- c2 Q`cBack  ---  2 Qc @Times New Roman---c- @ !*S`- @"Calibri---  2 j`c  "Arial--ccbbaa