Fabula
Location
Location

Roads and Schools

Foreign aid constructs roads across borders, paving paths through remote areas to link villages and ease cross-border travel, alongside new schools with classrooms for local children. President Bartlet names these projects in his speech, casting them as concrete results of the aid bill—symbols of American leadership fostering progress and a century of hope amid policy debate.
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Detailed Involvements

Events with rich location context

S4E12 · Guns Not Butter
Century of Hope: Bartlet's Foreign‑Aid Appeal

Roads and schools are named as the concrete infrastructure outcomes of the Foreign Ops bill; they function verbally to translate budgetary language into visible, long-term improvements that justify American leadership.

Atmosphere

Presented optimistically as achievable, pragmatic fixes that remedy deprivation when paired with political will.

Functional Role

Concrete exemplars of development aimed at convincing listeners of the bill's practical benefits.

Symbolic Significance

Represent tangible progress, the means by which moral rhetoric becomes durable social change.

Access Restrictions

Conceptual — cited as intended targets of funding rather than physical locations in the scene.

Named in a rapid list alongside food, medicine, teachers Operates as an image of rebuilding and connection

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