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The 1970

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Title: The 1970


1
The 1970s
  • 1968-1980

2
Nixon Through Bush
  • Testing the Superpower 1968-1993

3
Economic Problems Emerge
  • By the end of the 1960sthe prosperous economy
    of post War era was ending.
  • 1970s- no productive advance equal to one years
    progress in previous 20 years.
  • Median income of workers stagnated for next 20
    years!
  • Standard of living lower than parents??

4
The First Moon Landing
  • On July 20, 1969, Neil A. Armstrong became the
    first man to walk on the moon. He was joined by
    Edwin E. Buzz Aldrin, Jr., a fellow crewman on
    the Apollo 11 spacecraft.
  • Television viewers around the world watched the
    moon landing, and Apollo 11s crew were treated
    as heroes when they returned.

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6
Economics in the 1970s
  • Stagflation economic crisis of the 70s, 80s.
    inflation accompanied with low employment.
  • Income for most Americans rose- but prices rose
    correspondingly therefore, there were no real
    income gains (70s,80s,90s).
  • Cause unknown
  • Rising oil prices (x 4 after 1973 )- OPEC placed
    an embargo on oil (after 73 Yom Kippur War) for
    US other countries due to friendly policies
    towards Israel.
  • Aging US factories- not as efficient as German
    Japanese factories
  • Shift from manufacturing to service economy jobs
  • Military spending- Vietnam
  • Indexed Social Security welfare

7
Nixon Foreign Policy
  • Nixon Sec. of State Henry Kissinger (former
    Harvard Professor)
  • Vietnamization Nixon policy of gradual
    withdrawal of US troops from Vietnam allow S.
    Vietnam to slowly take over the fighting.
  • Nixon Doctrine- US would honor existing defense
    commitments, but in the future Asians others
    would have to fight their own wars without large
    numbers of US troops New Isolationism
  • De-escalation- Nixon reduced troops to 30,000
  • Jan. 1973- peace treaty is signed
  • Nixon called on silent majority who supported
    the war for support
  • Sent VP Spiro Agnew out to attack anti-war crowd

8
Fighting the war at home abroad
  • 1968- The My Lai Massacre
  • Oct. 1969- massive national Vietnam moratorium
    (Boston) Washington (150,000 plus)
  • Jan. 1970- Vietnam war became longest was 3rd
    costliest war in US history
  • Draft protests continued- blacks poor whites
    over represented in the draft. rich mans war,
    poor mans fight ends draft by 1973!
  • Fighting in Vietnam
  • Hard to distinguish who the enemy is where
  • Drug abuse, mutiny, sabotage common among US
    troops fragging their own officers!

9
US Invasion of Cambodia THE Kent State massacre
  • April 29, 1970- Invasion of Cambodia Nixon
    ordered US forces to join with S. Vietnamese
    forces to clean out Cambodia without consulting
    Congress. (1969- 1973- Nixon bombed Cambodia)
  • Laos Cambodia used by the Viet Cong North
    Vietnamese used trails for supplies HO CHI
    MINH TRAIL
  • Student Protests
  • The Kent State Massacre - angry college
    students believed Nixon was widening the war-
    angry protests.
  • Ohio National Guard fired into the crowd 4 dead
  • Jackson State- Mississippi Highway Patrol fired
    at a dormitory killed 2
  • June 1970- Nixon withdrew US troops from
    Cambodia

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11
Congress Reigns the President in
  • The Senate withdrew the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
  • Reduced draft calls, shortened period of
    draftability, on a lottery basis from 8 years to
    1.
  • 26th Amendment (1971)- lowered voting age from 21
    to 18.
  • 1973 War Powers Act- President must report
    to Congress within 48 hours after committing
    troops Congress could limit action to 60 days
    extend another 30.
  • The Pentagon Papers
  • Leaked to NY Times by former Defense Dept
    worker- Daniel Ellsberg - Nixon tried to block
    it-lost in Supreme Court.
  • showed mistakes deceptions concerning Vietnam
    from Kennedy to LBJ.
  • How US provoked N. Vietnamese to attack US ships
    in Gulf of Tonkin.

12
Nixon Detente
  • 1969- Soviet Union China were fighting each
    other in border skirmishes in Asia each had
    rival interpretations of Marxism.
  • Nixon- decided to play them against one another.
  • Feb. 1972- Nixon traveled to China Shanghai
    Communiqué both nations agreed to normalize
    relations US acceptance of One China policy)
  • May 1972- Nixon invited to USSR (1ST US president
    to visit) DÉTENTE (relaxing of tensions)
  • 1972- 3 Year deal- US will sell USSR 750 million
    in food

13
Results of Détente
  • ABM Treaty- 1st treaty limited defensive
    missiles.
  • SALT I- (Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty)- froze
    numbers of ICBMs for 5 years.
  • Both sides continued production of (defensive
    missiles 16,000 nuclear warheads by 1980s.
  • Nixon Latin America
  • 1970- Opposed election of Marxist Salvador
    Allende (Chile)
  • Embargoed Chile
  • CIA worked covertly to undermine Allende
    government
  • 1973- Allende killed in a military coup- US
    backed new guy General Augusto Pinochet

14
Nixon The Burger Supreme Court
  • 1969- Nixon nominated Warren E. Burger as chief
    justice to replace retiring Earl Warren
  • 1971- court had 4 conservatives out of 9 on
    Supreme Court
  • Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg School Board
    (1971)- court ruled that busing could be used to
    integrate schools- controversial angered whites.
  • Roe V. Wade (1973)- legalized abortion in the
    US.

15
Nixon Domestic Policies
  • Nixon expanded welfare programs
  • Increased funding for food stamps, AFDC, Indexed
    Social Security
  • Reduced nations poverty rate by 11 (still lowest
    in US history)
  • Philadelphia Plan- required construction trade
    unions to set a timetable for hiring minorities-
    extended program to all federal contracts
  • altered the meaning of affirmative action to
    include certain groups.
  • LBJ- intended it to mainly protect individuals
  • Griggs v. Duke Power Co. (1971) outlawed
    intelligence tests that exclude minorities
    women.

16
Nixon the Environment
  • Rachel Carson- Silent Spring (1962)- mother
    of the modern environmental movement.
  • April 22, 1970- 1st Earth Day
  • Created the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency)
    - 1970
  • Clean Air Water Act (1970)
  • Endangered Species Act (1973)
  • 25th Amendment (1967)- Clarified the
    constitution- Article II, Section 1, Clause 6
    (does not specifically state if the VP becomes
    President or acting president).
  • Incapacitated President VP IS President
  • New President chooses new VP with consent of
    Congress

17
Nixon Battles Political Enemies
  • Nixons suspicious and secretive nature caused
    the White House to operate as if it were
    surrounded by political enemies.
  • Nixon-- developed enemies list
  • Nixon ordered that wiretaps- even of his own
    staff
  • In response, Nixon organized a special White
    House unit, nicknamed the Plumbers, to stop
    government leaks.
  • In September 1971, the Plumbers broke into the
    office of Ellsbergs psychiatrist, hoping to
    punish Ellsberg by disclosing damaging personal
    information about him.

18
The PLUMBERS
  • Started campaign of dirty tricks that included
    IRS harassment and derailing of Democratic
    frontrunner Edmund Muskie.
  • Used methods as calling New Hampshire voters in
    the middle of the night and claiming to be from
    Harlem for Muskee or putting signs around Florida
    stating Help Muskee in busing more children now
  • Funded by Committee to Re-Elect the President
    (CREEP) which used highly questionable fund
    raising tactics and raised over 20 million

19
Election 1972
  • Republican Richard Nixon promised to wind down
    the democrat war had reduced troop levels from
    540,000 to 30,000
  • Kissinger announced that peace was at hand
  • The Southern Strategy- Republicans appealed to
    white southern voters appointing conservative
    Justices, slowing Civil Rights, opposing school
    busing- led to Republicans being strong in South.
  • Democrat George McGovern- promised to pull US
    troops out of the war within 90 days
  • Watergate scandal began during the election
    (involved CREEP)
  • Nixon won in a landslide!!

20
The Watergate Break-In
  • In March 1972, a group within the Committee to
    Reelect the President made plans to wiretap the
    phones at the Democratic National Committee
    Headquarters at the Watergate apartment complex
    in Washington, D.C.
  • This group was led by E. Howard Hunt and G.
    Gordon Liddy. The groups first attempt failed.
    During their second attempt on June 17, 1972,
    five men were arrested.
  • The money they carried was traced directly to
    Nixons reelection campaign, linking the break-in
    to the campaign.
  • The break-in and the cover-up which resulted
    became known as the Watergate scandal.

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22
The Watergate Cover-up
  • Although Nixon had not been involved in the
    break-in, he became involved in its coverup.
  • He illegally authorized the CIA to try to
    persuade the FBI to stop its investigation of the
    break-in, on the grounds that the matter involved
    national security.
  • Nixon advisors launched a scheme to bribe the
    Watergate defendants into silence, as well as
    coaching them on how to lie in court.

23
VP Spiro Agnew-Oct 1973
  • Nixons belligerent Vice-President who took on
    opponents much like Nixon did for Ike
  • Alliteratively referred to hopeless, hysterical
    hypochondriacs of history
  • Pleaded no contest to bribe charges, resigns
    from office in late 1973
  • Gerald Ford replaces Agnew as VP (25th Amendment
    used for 1st Time)

24
The WATERGATE Trials
  • Nixon administration denied any knowledge
  • Burglars were convicted in January 1973 and,
    despite offers of 400K in hush money from White
    House Counsel John Dean, one of the burglars
    started to talk
  • Washington Post reporters, Carl Bernstein and Bob
    Woodward began to expose cover-up

25
The Scandal Unfolds
  • The Watergate Trial
  • At the trial of the Watergate burglars in early
    1973, all the defendants either pleaded guilty or
    were found guilty.
  • Judge John J. Sirica, presiding over the trial,
    was not convinced that the full story had been
    told.
  • sentenced the burglars to long prison terms,
    suggesting that their terms could be reduced if
    they cooperated with upcoming Senate hearings on
    Watergate.
  • Senate held Watergate hearings led by NC Senator
    Sam Ervin Jr.

26
WATERGATE Hearings
  • In February 1973, the Senate voted to establish a
    select committee to investigate the scandal
  • In April, 3 of Nixons top aides resigned after
    their implication and Dean, who was getting
    nervous, was fired while press secretary Ron
    Zeigler declared all previous statements on the
    subject inoperative

27
WATERGATE Hearings
  • In May, the Senate Watergate Committee chaired by
    Sam Ervin of North Carolina began nationally
    televised hearings
  • On June 14, Jeb Magruder, former Asst. Sec of
    Commerce, confessed his guilt and implicated
    Attorney General John Mitchell, John Dean and
    others
  • Dean then implicated Nixon and an aide revealed
    that there was a secret taping system in the
    White House

28
The Saturday Night Massacre
  • May 1973 Nixon agreed to the appointment of a
    special prosecutor for the Watergate affair.
  • A special prosecutor works for the Justice
    Department and conducts an investigation into
    claims of wrongdoing by government officials.
  • The Watergate special prosecutor, Archibald Cox,
    insisted that Nixon release the White House
    tapes.
  • Nixon ordered Attorney-General Elliot Richardson
    to fire Cox on Saturday, October 20, 1973,
    leading Richardson and the asst. Attorney-General
    to resign. The third in line to the
    Attorney-General Robert Bork fired Cox.
  • known as the Saturday Night Massacre.

29
Impeachment Hearings and Nixons Resignation
  • After the Saturday Night Massacre, Congress began
    the process of determining if they should impeach
    the President, or charge him with misconduct
    while in office.
  • Summer of 1974, the House Judiciary Committee
    voted to impeach Nixon on numerous charges.
    Conviction, and removal from office, seemed
    likely.
  • The US vs. Nixon (1973)- Court ordered Nixon to
    turn over Whitehouse tapes President could not
    claim executive privilege.
  • On August 5, 1974, Nixon released the White House
    tapes, with an 18 1/2 minute gap. Even with this
    gap, the tapes revealed his involvement in the
    Watergate cover-up.
  • On August 9, 1974, Nixon resigned, the first
    President ever to do so. Gerald Ford was sworn
    in as the new President.

30
RESIGNATION
  • A delegation of the most senior members of
    Congress, led by Barry Goldwater, informed the
    President that no more than 15 Senators still
    supported him
  • On August 9, 1974, Nixon resigned
  • Vice President Gerald Ford became President

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32
Vietnam Watergate AFTERMATH
  • 26th Amendment gave 18 year olds the right to
    vote.
  • In middle of crisis, Congress, over Nixons veto
    had passed the 1973-War Powers Act- limited
    presidential commitment of troops overseas to 60
    days, after that required to get congressional
    approval
  • 1974 strengthened Freedom of Information Act gave
    citizens greater access to files that federal
    government agencies had on them
  • Fair Campaign Practices Act of 1974 limited
    campaign contributions and provided for stricter
    accountability and public financing of
    presidential campaigns
  • Independent Counsel Act of 1978 required Attorney
    General, in cases of suspected criminal activity
    in the executive branch, to call on three federal
    judges to appoint a special prosecutor
  • American distrust of its government, credibility
    gap

33
  • Gerald Ford Presidency
  • (1974 to 1977)
  • Only non-elected VP and President.
  • Famous quote HEALING PROCESS MUST BEGIN
  • Pardoned Richard Nixon and granted amnesty or
    pardon
  • Did little domestically or in foreign affairs
    because Congress was controlled by the Democrats.
  • Instituted campaign to
    Whip Inflation Now (WIN)
  • He was a Republican
  • 1975, Saigon fall to the North Vietnam and
    Vietnam was united under Communism.
  • HELSINKI ACCORDS

34
The Helsinki Accords
  • Helsinki Accords Ford other leaders (34
    nations) met in Finland signed treaty that
    settled Soviet dictated boundaries for Poland
    Eastern bloc countries officially ended WWII
  • 3RD set of agreements Soviets guaranteed liberal
    exchanges of people between East West human
    rights
  • USSR was still spreading communism!!

35
Vietnam
  • 1973- Last US troops left Vietnam
  • 1975- North Vietnam invaded S. Vietnam South
    Vietnam fell to the Communists Vietnam became
    Communist
  • Capital - Saigon renamed Ho Chi Minh City
  • April 1975- Last remaining American citizens
    140,000 South Vietnamese rescued from Vietnam
  • Vietnamese refugees allowed to settle in the US
  • Costs of Vietnam
  • 118 Billion
  • 56,000 dead
  • 300,000 wounded
  • Lost face to foreigners, lost self-esteem, lost
    confidence, reduced economic clout

36
2nd Wave Feminism
  • Betty Friedan- The Feminist Mystique (1963)
  • Co-Founder of N.O.W. (National Organization of
    Women)-1966 (Shirley Chisholm co-founder also)
  • 1960s- Robin Morgan -founded W.I.T.C.H. (Womens
    International Terrorist Conspiracy from Hell)-
    radical wing of feminism.
  • Rape crisis centers battered womens shelters
    appear 1960s
  • 1972- Title IX- prohibits sex discrimination in
    any federally assisted educational program
    created opportunities for womens athletics in
    schools colleges.
  • Equal Rights Amendment (ERA)- pushed by feminists
    was defeated in 1982 by opponents (Phyllis
    Schlafly)

37
Second Wave Feminism
  • Gains Affirmative action applied to women, Title
    IX, Shirley Chisholm (1st woman candidate for
    Pres. 1972 election-Democrat)
  • 1984- Geraldine Ferraro- ran for VP on Mondale
    ticket
  • 2008 - Hillary Clinton
  • 1980- women are 51 of workforce, sexual
    harassment in workplace outlawed make big gains
    in university admission graduate school.
  • Conflict/Disappointments
  • Phyllis Schafley among female opponents who
    stopped ERA from being passed.
  • Divorce rate 82 in 1970s
  • Issues divide women as politics of resentment
    goes up- race, gender, abortion, sexual
    orientation

38
Civil Rights in the 1970s
  • Civil Rights movement had fracturedbut
  • US v. Wheeler (1972) ruled that Native American
    tribes had a unique limited sovereignty subject
    to Congress but, not the STATES tax free
    reservations, casinos, gambling etc.
  • Milliken v. Bradley (1974)- cant require
    students move across school district lines in
    order to desegregate reinforced encouraged
    white flight
  • 1978- Bakke v. University of California at
    Davis (Berkeley)- court ruled that preference
    could not be given solely on basis of race alone
    for admissions, but could be used in overall
    policy.

39
Election of 1976-Bicenteniel
  • Republican Gerald Ford
  • Democrat Jimmy Carter- former Governor of
    Georgia, born again Christian, peanut famer (dark
    horse candidate)
  • I will never lie to the American people.-Carter

40
Jimmy Carters Presidency
  • Americans were attracted to Carter
  • Washington outsider
  • Unwilling to participate in consensus politics,
    alienates key Democrats
  • Human Rights Diplomacy
  • Panama Canal
  • Camp David Accords (1978)
  • Iran Hostage Crisis (1979)
  • Soviet Afghan Invasion (1980)
  • Inflation
  • Rising Interest Rates
  • Gives crisis of confidence speech reflecting
    what voters see in him
  • Loses re-election campaign to Reagan

41
Carter Presidency- Foreign Policy
  • Overriding element pushing his foreign policy was
    Human Rights
  • UN Ambassador Andrew Young- spoke out on behalf
    of Africans who were oppressed
  • Camp David Accords (1978)- peace agreement
    between Egypt Israel.
  • 1979- Panama Canal to be turned over to
    Panamanians by year 2000.
  • Full diplomatic relations with China (1st time in
    33 years).

42
Camp David Accords
  • Carter brings Egyptian president Anwar Sadat and
    Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin together
    for negotiation
  • Historic treaty gives Israel first recognition by
    Arab nation
  • Camp David Peace
    Accords signed
    in 1978
  • Greatest feat of
    Carters presidency

43
Iranian Hostage Crisis
  • 1979-Fundamentalist Muslim movement overthrows
    Shah of Iran for Ayatollah
    Khomeini
  • US allows Shah in
    country for medical
    treatment
  • Iranians take 52
    Americans in embassy hostage - hold until
    Carter leaves office-444 days

44
Iranian Hostage Crisis-1979
  • Dominated TV news daily Ted Koppel Nightline
    show began
  • Carter oked a rescue mission by US Special
    forces ends in disaster 8 US service men dead
  • Carter seen as weak for not being able to
    rescue hostages dominated his last year in
    office.
  • Hostages finally released the day Reagan was
    inaugurated (1981)

45
The Iranian Hostage Crisis
46
Carter the Soviets
  • USSR invaded Afghanistan (Dec. 1979) next to oil
    rich Iran
  • Carter ordered embargo of grain technology to
    the USSR boycotted the Olympics.
  • USSR was bogged down in Afghanistan for a decade
    Russia's Vietnam

47
Carter Domestic Issues
  • Economy was still stagnant (inflation continued)
  • Prime interest rate 20 (1980)
  • Foreign trade was now higher of GNP US must
    take part in Global economy
  • Federal budget deficit 60 Billion (1980)
  • Carter believed that US dependence on foreign
    oil was detrimental
  • Created-- Department of Energy
  • Legislation to create better MPG for cars
  • Cut taxes by 18 Billion
  • Economic malaise continued

48
1970s the Energy Crisis
  • Oct. 1967- The Six Day War Israelis vs. Jordan,
    Syria, Egypt backed by most of the Arab
    countries.
  • Israel took control-Sinai Peninsula, Gaza
  • 1973- Syria Egypt attacked Israel US sent
    airlift supplies (warned USSR)
  • OPEC- raised prices embargo US in 1970s
  • US builds Alaska pipeline
  • Sets speed limit at 55
  • Advocates DEMANDED more coal nuclear power
  • 1948 onUS IS A NET IMPORTER OF OIL MASKED BY
    HUGE 25 YEAR SUPPLY AFTER WWII.

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51
The Love Canal Incident (1978)
  • 1940s Hooker Chemical Co. given permission to
    dump chemical waste in canal.
  • Dumpsite operational until 1953covered with soil
    vegetation.
  • School Board coerced Hooker Chemical to sale the
    site for new schools- 1
  • Over time-schools communities were built near
    the site.
  • 1976- water tests revealed chemicals in drinking
    water 1978- birth defects noted
  • Lois Gibbs spent years getting company
    government to clean up take care of community

52
The Three Mile Island Accident
  • March 28, 1979- a core meltdown occurred at the
    Three Mile Island Nuclear Facility.
  • Near Harrisburg, Penn.
  • Most significant in history of USA nuclear
    commercial power
  • Released 13 million curies of radioactive gases
    20 curies of iodine-131 (rated a 5 on a 7 scale)
  • 140,000 people evacuated (voluntarily)
  • Clean-up-1979-1993 (1 Billion)
  • Emboldened Anti-Nuke activists
  • Since TMI-no authorization for new nuclear
    power plants in US!!

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