Title: A.P. Final Review Part III
1A.P. Final ReviewPart III
- Progressives through World War II
2Progressive Movement
- Idea return control of the government to the
people, restore economic opportunities, and
correct injustices in American life - Roots????
- Goals
- Protect social welfare
- Promote moral improvement
- Create economic reform
- Foster efficiency
- Political reform
3Progressive MovementGOALS
- Protecting social welfare
- Settlement houses, soup kitchens, YMCA
- Jacob Riis
- Promoting moral reform
- Prohibition
- Creating economic reform
- Muckrakers journalists who wrote about corrupt
business and politics - Upton Sinclair
- Fostering efficiency
- Scientific management
- Assembly line production
- 5. Election reform
4Election Reforms
- Initiative a bill originated by citizens (not
lawmakers) placed on the ballot - Referendum vote on an initiative
- Recall ability of voters to remove public
officials by forcing them to face election sooner
than scheduled - 17th Amendment direct election of Senators (not
state legislatures)
5Teddy Roosevelts Square Deal
- Federal arbitration 1902 coal strike threatens
supply - Government creates a commission to work out a
compromise (a new precedent) - Forced arbitration!!!
- Trust-busting used Sherman Antitrust Act to sue
companies believed to have a monopoly - Regulation
- Meat inspection act strict guidelines for meat
processing - Food and Drug act halt sale of contaminated
foods and medicines and called for truth in
labeling - Conservation
- Set aside over 200 million acres as National
Parks, Forests and Preserves - Civil Rights no improvement!!!!!
6TR Legacy
- Contributions
- Conservation
- Enlarged power and prestige of presidency
- Compromise diplomacy (with a BIG stick)
- Public opinion as a political weapon
- Public awareness of global community
7Good Old Will Taft
- Father of Dollar Diplomacy
- Increase US investment in strategic areas
- Trustbuster
- 2x TR
- Standard Oil
- US Steel (oops)
8Bad Old Will Taft
- Payne-Aldrich Bill
- Intended to reduce tariffs instead raises tariffs
- Breaks campaign promise and splits Republican
Party - Ballinger-Pinchot Dispute
- Open public lands to corporate development
91912 Election GOP Divided by Bull MooseEquals
Democratic Victory!
101912 Election
- Labeled as the Election that changed the century
- Why?
- Choice of political and economic philosophies
- Democratic Laissez faire economics and social
policy - Republican socially conservative, limited
progressive reforms - Progressive activist welfare state
- Winner?
- Progressive reforms for Americans!!!
11Dr. Wilson
- Jeffersonian
- Moral wall?
- Goals
- Tariffs
- Underwood Bill
- Banks
- Federal Reserve Act
- Trusts
- FTC
- Clayton-Anti Trust Act
12Income Tax / Federal Reserve System
- 16th Amendment graduated tax on income
- Started at 1 and rose to 6
- Today 20 and up
- Federal Reserve System
- US divided into 12 districts
- Each district has a federal reserve bank
- Issue currency, loan money to banks
13Wilsons Moral Diplomacy
- The U. S. shouldbe the conscienceof the world.
- Spread democracy.
- Promote peace.
- Condemn colonialism.
14America Becomes a World Power
15American Imperialism
- Factors
- Economic competition between nations
- Political and military competition
- Belief in racial and cultural superiority
- Actions
- Hawaii
- Cuba
- Puerto Rico
16Hawaii
- Sugar, Sugar, Sugar
- 75 of wealth
- No duty (tax) on sugar sold to U.S.
- Most plantation owners from U.S.
- Political issues
- Only land owners can vote
- U.S. treaty for Pearl Harbor
- Change in Hawaiis ruler
- Liliuokalani deposed with help from U.S.
military - President Cleveland refuses to recognize as a
territory unless Hawaiians want it - President McKinley proclaims Hawaii a U.S.
territory
17CUBA
- Cuban Revolution 1895
- U.S. Split
- Support Spain to protect American business
interests - Support Cuban rebels to promote liberty
- Yellow journalism reporting that exaggerates
the news to lure new readers - Stirs support for rebels
- Creates news
- Teller amendment promises Cuban independence if
US assists
18Yellow Journalism Jingoism
Joseph Pulitzer
Hearst to Frederick Remington You furnish
the pictures, and Ill furnish the war!
William Randolph Hearst
19De Lôme Letter
- Dupuy de Lôme, SpanishAmbassador to the U.S.
- Criticized PresidentMcKinley as weak and
abidder for the admirationof the crowd,
besidesbeing a would-be politicianwho tries to
leave a dooropen behind himself whilekeeping on
good termswith the jingoes of hisparty.
20Remember the Maineand to Hell with Spain!
Funeral for Maine victims in Havana
21The Treaty of Paris 1898
- Cuba was freed from Spanish rule.
- Spain gave up Puerto Rico and the island ofGuam.
- The U. S. paid Spain20 mil. for
thePhilippines. - The U. S. becomesan imperial power!
22American Impacts
- 350-400 Battle Deaths
- 2000-5000 Death by Disease
- Typhoid, Malaria, etc.
- Bad beef
- Unprepared
- Clothing, training, weapons, leadership
- Strengths
- Numbers, Navy
23The American Anti-Imperialist
League
- Founded in 1899.
- Mark Twain, Andrew Carnegie, WilliamJames, and
WilliamJennings Bryan amongthe leaders. - Campaigned against the annexation of
thePhilippines and otheracts of imperialism.
24Cuban Independence?
Senator Orville Platt
Platt Amendment (1903) 1. Cuba was not to enter
into any agreements with foreign powers that
would endanger its independence. 2. The U.S.
could intervene in Cuban affairs if
necessary to maintain an efficient, independent
govt. 3. Cuba must lease Guantanamo Bay to the
U.S. for naval and coaling station. 4. Cuba
must not build up an excessive public debt.
25Puerto Rico
- 1900 - Foraker Act Limited degree of popular
government - 1901-1903 ? the Insular Cases Constitution does
not fully apply to territories - 1917 Jones Act
- U.S. Citizenship for Puerto Ricans
26Emilio Aguinaldo
- Leader of the FilipinoUprising.
- July 4, 1946Philippine independence
27The Boxer Rebellion 1900
- The Peaceful Harmonious Fists.
- 55 Days at Peking.
28The Open Door Policy
- Secretary John Hay.
- Give all nations equalaccess to trade in China.
- Guaranteed that China would NOT be taken over by
any one foreign power.
29Panama The Kings Crown
- 1850 ? Clayton-BulwerTreaty (US not allowed to
get exclusive control over Panama route) - 1901 ? Hay-PaunceforteTreaty (US free to build
and fortify a canal) - Panama revolution?
- 1903 ? Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty. (US purchases
rights from French)
30 The Roosevelt Corollary to the
Monroe Doctrine 1905
Chronic wrongdoing may in America, as elsewhere,
ultimately require intervention by some civilized
nation, and in the Western Hemisphere the
adherence of the United States to the Monroe
Doctrine may force the United States, however
reluctantly, in flagrant cases of such wrongdoing
or impotence, to the exercise of an international
police power .
31Speak Softly,But Carry a Big Stick!
32Treaty of Portsmouth 1905
Nobel Peace Prize for Teddy
33Yellow Peril
- Post Russo-Japanese War
- Laborers flock to California
- Racial tensions
- School discrimination
- Gentlemens Agreement
- Japan agrees to limit (eliminate?) laborers
headed to California
34The Great White Fleet 1907
35The Mexican Revolution 1910s
- Victoriano Huerta seizes control of Mexico
- Venustiano Carranza, Pancho Villa, Emiliano
Zapata, and Alvaro Obregon fought against
Huerta. - The U.S. also got involved by occupying Veracruz
and Huerta fled the country. - Eventually Carranza would gain power in Mexico.
- Pancho Villa seizes power pursued by
Blackjack Pershing until recalled for WWI
36 World War I - Causes
371. The Alliance System
Triple Entente
Triple Alliance
38The Major Players 1914-17
Allied Powers
Central Powers
Nicholas II Rus
Wilhelm II Ger
George V Br
Victor Emmanuel II It
Enver PashaTurkey
Pres. Poincare Fr
Franz Josef A-H
39Europe in 1914
402. Militarism Arms Race
1910-1914 Increase in Defense Expenditures
France 10
Britain 13
Russia 39
Germany 73
413. Economic Imperial Rivalries
424. Aggressive Nationalism
43Pan-Slavism The Balkans, 1914
ThePowder Kegof Europe
44The Assassination Sarajevo
45Whos To Blame?
46Almost 40 Million Activated 1914-18
47Blood Money or Capitalism?
- Loans
- Allies (4B by 1916)
- Trade with Allies
- War goods
- Food
- Blockades
- British
- German
- Enforced by U-Boat
48The Sinking of the Lusitania
49Election of 1916
Charles Evans Hughes Republican Charles Evasive
Hughes Dove-Hawk
Woodrow Wilson Democrat He Kept Us Out of War
50The Zimmerman Telegram
Wilson proposes Peace without Victory German
response Unlimited Submarine warfare in the
war zone!!! Secret proposal to Mexico
51Allied Ships Sunk by U-Boats
Before the US Enters the WAR
After the US Enters the WAR
52Wilsons Fourteen Points
- Moral leader of the Allied Cause
- KEY POINTS
- Abolish secret treaties
- Freedom of the seas
- End of economic sanctions
- Reduction in arms
- Self-determination for colonies
- League of Nations (collective security)
531917 Selective Service Act
- 24,000,000 men registered for the draft by the
end of 1918. - 4,800,000 men served in WW1 (2,000,000 saw
active combat). - 400,000 African-Americansserved in segregated
units. - 15,000 Native-Americans served as scouts,
messengers, and snipers in non-segregated units.
54Government Excess Threats to the Civil
Liberties of Americans
1. Espionage Act 1917 - forbade actions
that obstructed recruitment or
efforts to promote insubordination in the
military. - ordered the Postmaster General
to remove Leftist materials from the
mail. - fines of up to 10,000 and/or
up to 20 years in prison.
55Government Excess Threats to the Civil
Liberties of Americans
2. Sedition Act 1918 - it was a crime to
speak against the purchase of war bonds or
willfully utter, print, write or publish any
disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive
language about this form of US Govt., the US
Constitution, or the US armed forces or to
willfully urge, incite, or advocate any
curtailment of production of things
necessary or essential to the prosecution of
the warwith intent of such curtailment to
cripple or hinder, the US in the prosecution
of the war.
56Government Excess Threats to the Civil
Liberties of Americans
3. Schenck v. US 1919 - in ordinary times the
mailing of the leaflets would have been
protected by the 1st Amendment. - BUT,
every act of speech must be judged acc. to
the circumstances in which it was spoken.
-The most stringent protection of free
speech would not protect a man in falsely
shouting fire in a theater and causing a
panic. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes - If an
act of speech posed a clear and present
danger, then Congress had the power to
restrain such speech.
57Council of National Defense
- War Industries Board Bernard Baruch
- Food Administration Herbert Hoover
- Railroad Administration William McAdoo
- National War Labor Board W. H.Taft
Frank P. Walsh
58Results of This New Organization of the Economy
during WWI
- Unemployment virtually disappeared.
- Expansion of big government.
- Excessive govt. regulations in eco.
- Some gross mismanagement ? overlapping
jurisdictions. - Close cooperation between public and private
sectors. - Unprecedented opportunities for disadvantaged
groups.
59Labor Issues vs. Patriotism
- Post-war labor unrest
- Coal Miners Strike of 1919.
- Steel Strike of 1919.
- Boston Police Strike of 1919.
60Opportunities for African-Americans in WW1
- Great Migration. 1916 1919 ? 70,000
- War industries work.
- Enlistment in segregated units.
61Increased Racial Tension
- African-Americans used as strike breakers
- Great Migration expands urban issues
- Overcrowding
- Economic competition
- Segregation
- Race riots / lynching increase
62Role of Women
- Patriotism and opportunity lead to female factory
workers and farmers - Wilson endorses (finally) suffrage as a vital
necessity for the war effort - Economic, social, and political strength
63Wilson Fights for Peace
- Early 1918 German military takes over the German
government - German Kaiser began peace negotiations
- German army/navy mutiny
- Germany surrenders 11/11/1918 _at_ 1100 a.m.
- Last allied offensive 900 a.m.
- Last deaths _at_ 1059 a.m.
- Wilson travels to Paris for negotiations
- No Republicans invited
64Treaty of Versailles
- Britain and France wanted harsh conditions to
insure Germany would not be a threat again - Conditions
- Germany accepts blame for the War
- Germany has to pay 132 billion in reparations
- Alsace-Lorraine returned to France
- German military drastically reduced
- Colonies become protectorates of Allies
- Nine new nations created Czechoslovakia,
Hungary, Romania, Serbia, Poland, Lithuania,
Estonia, Latvia, and Finland
65Weaknesses of the Treaty
- Humiliates Germany
- Ignores Russia
- Separate peace with Germany 1917
- Russian Revolution
- Reassigns colonies not self-determination or
freedom
66Domestic / Political Issues
- Isolationists
- Henry Cabot Lodge
- Led opposition of moral pledge Article 10 (US
OBLIGATED to help w/o Congress) - Successfully delayed treaty hearings
- Wilson inflexible
- Who kills the treaty?
67Consequences of the War
- Human 10 million dead, 25 million injured
- Economic - 330 billion, destruction of European
economy - Physical destruction of property
- Political End of German, Austrian, Russian, and
Ottoman Empires - Creation of weak states
- Establishment of communism
- Psychological deepens and expands nationalism,
expands pessimistic view of humanity
68US Consequences of WWI
- 120,000 dead 300,000 injured
- Accelerates Americas emergence as worlds
greatest industrial leader - Relocates American population to urban areas
- Increases anti-immigrant and anti-radical
sentiments
69Post-War America
- Roaring Twenties Depressing Thirties
70Post-War America
- Renewed isolationism
- WHY?
- Increased suspicion of foreign-born people
- WHY?
- Increased political conservatism
- Turning away from progressive reforms
71The Red Scare
- Attorney General, A. Mitchell Palmer (The Case
Against the Reds) - Palmer Raids 1920
- Sacco Vanzetti Trial
- Union membership communism
- Decline in Union Membership
- Protect America from foreign ideas and people
72Return of the Klan
- By 1924 membership 4.5 million
- Beliefs
- Keep blacks in their place
- Drive Catholics, Jews, and foreign-born out of
the country - Enforce prohibition
- Oppose labor unions
73Immigration Act of 1924
- AKA the National Origins Act, Asian Exclusion Act
or the Johnson-Reed Act - Limited the number of immigrants who could be
admitted from any country to 2 of the number of
people from that country who were already living
in the United States in 1890. - Excluded immigration to the US of Asian
laborers,1 specifically Chinese immigrants 2
and had the effect of preventing Japanese
Americans from legally owning land. - The law was aimed at further restricting the
Southern and Eastern Europeans who had begun to
enter the country in large numbers beginning in
the 1890s, as well as East Asians and Asian
Indians, who were prohibited from immigrating
entirely. - It set no limits on immigration from Latin
America.
74Immigration Changes
Red North/West Europe Blue
South/East Europe
75The Prohibition Experiment1920-1933
- Causes
- Various religious groups thought alcohol was
sinful - Need to protect the publics health
- Alcohol leads to crime, domestic abuse, and job
issues - Nativism against foreign born brewers and
immigrants that used alcohol
- Effects
- Widespread disregard for the law
- Increased smuggling and bootlegging
- New source of criminal income
- Birth of organized crime
76Science vs. Religion
- Fundamentalism literal interpretation of the
Bible - Adam Eve or a Monkey?
- Evolution theory
- Creation theory
- The Scopes Trial
- Bryan vs. Darrow
77Business of America
- Impact of the Automobile
- Paved roads
- Urban sprawl
- Independence and economic revolution
- Airplanes
- Electric Conveniences
- Radios (75), washing machine (150), sewing
machine (60) - Advertising, credit, and consumer choices
78The Twenties Woman
- Fashion
- What do clothing styles reflect?
- Actions
- Smoking, dancing, and drinking
- Relationships
- Marriage
- Double standard
- Birth Control Margaret Sanger
- Sigmund Freud Repression is unhealthy?
- Work
- 10 million women workers (24 of the total)
79African-Americans
- Great Migration
- By the end of the 1920s almost five million
African-Americans lived in cities (40) - Huge numbers of race riots (25 in 1919)
- Goals NAACP
- Protest racial violence
- Promote legislation to protect African-American
rights
80Marcus Garvey
- Founded Universal Negro Improvement Association
- Promote African-American businesses
- Support a Back to Africa movement
- Black Star Line
- Colonize a nation
- Convicted of mail fraud and jailed
- Legacy black pride, economic independence and
reverence for Africa
81Harlem Renaissance
- Literary and artistic movement celebrating
African-American culture - Why Harlem?
- Mix of southerners, West Indies, Cuba, Puerto
Rico, and Haiti - Worlds largest black urban community
- Key figures
- Claude McKay militant poet
- Langston Hughes poet
- Louis Armstrong Jazz musician
- Duke Ellington Jazz musician
82Isolationism in the New World
- Washington Conference
- Reduce Naval Arms race
- Limit base building in Far East
- Kellogg-Briand Pact
- International agreement against using war as an
instrument of national policy - Small problem
- No way to enforce
- No provision for military or economic sanctions
against any nation that violated the pact
83Double Trouble
- Economic isolationism Tariff Walls
- Thirty two increases in six years
- Pressures Europe to respond in kind
- Future outcomes?
- Teapot Dome (or the Return of Grant)
- Secretary of the Interior Fall leases oil lands
to private business in exchange for 400k (loans)
84Debt, Debt, and more Debt
- Creditor status
- 16 B owed how to collect?
- Allies issues
- Tariffs reduce sales which reduce payments
- Reparations from Germany
- French occupation of the Ruhr Valley
- Cripples economy hyperinflation
- Dawes Plan
85Dawes Plan
- Main points of The Dawes Plan were
- The Ruhr area was to be evacuated by Allied
occupation troops. - Reparation payments would begin at 1 billion
marks for the first year and should rise over a
period of four years to 2.5 billion marks per
year. - 3. Foreign loans (primarily from the United
States) would be made available to Germany. - Goal Repayment of debts by Allies to US (BIG
CIRCLE)
86Hoovers Early Actions
- Help the Farmers (McNary-Haugen)
- Buy surplus boost prices
- Problems with this plan?
- Hawley-Smoot Tariff
- Highest protective tariff in peacetime
- Decreases foreign purchases
- Raises foreign tariffs
- Fuels anti-American attitudes
87The Stock Market Crash The Final Straw!!!
- Crash 10/29/29 (16 million shares traded)
- By mid-November investors lost 30 Billion
- By end of December investors lost 10 Billion
more..
88Short Term Effects 1929-33
- Bank Failures
- By 1933, 6000 banks closed (25 of all banks)
- 9 million individual savings accounts lost
- Manufacturing output cut in half
- 85,000 businesses went bankrupt
- Unemployment
- 1929 3 of eligible workers unemployed
- 1933 25 of eligible workers unemployed
- Remaining workers take reduced pay and hours
89Impacts Urban Areas
- Widespread homelessness
- Creation of shantytowns (Hoovervilles)
- Begging, soup kitchens, bread lines
- Destruction of families
- Riding the rails gt 2 million men
- Increased racial tensions
- Competition for employment
90Impacts in Rural Areas
- Huge numbers of farm foreclosures (over 400,000
between 1929-1932) - Environment issues
- Overproduction destroys soil
- Extreme drought creates Dust Bowl
- Migrant families
- Farmers move West for work
91President Hoovers Reactions
- Any lack of confidence in the economic
future..is foolish - Remain optimistic!
- Rugged individualism succeed through effort
- Limited government involvement in economy
- Federal building projects Boulder Dam
- Federal Farm Board help raise farm prices
- Reconstruction Finance Corp loan money to
banks, industries, etc. (up to 2 billion)
92The Bonus Army
- WWI veterans scheduled to receive a bonus in
1945 (about 500 each) - 20,000 march to Washington in 1932
- WE WANT OUR BONUS NOW!!!!
- Created a shantytown outside of Washington
- Hoover orders them to leave (most obey)
- 2000 stay and are removed by US Army with force
(gas and bullets) - Nation is shocked!
93Franklin Delano Roosevelt
- Promised A New Deal for the American People
- Three goals
- Relief for the needy
- Economic recovery
- Financial reform
- Used radio broadcasts (fireside chats) to explain
goals to the people
94Financial Reform
- Emergency Banking Relief Act of 1933
- Close all banks (bank holiday)
- Only financially secure banks reopened
- Support stable banks with Federal Treasury (print
more money) - Glass-Steagall Banking Act of 1933 provide
federal insurance for individual accounts (FDIC) - Call in the gold supply
- Temporarily take US off gold standard
- Treasury buy gold at market price
95Relief for the Needy
- Jobs
- Civilian Conservation Corp (CCC) provided jobs
for young men building roads, parks, and planting
trees - Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA)
payments to states for direct relief or wages for
work projects - Civil Works Administration (CWA) provided
construction and teaching jobs short term - Works Progress Administration (WPA) created
jobs for 8 million people in everything from
construction to music teachers
96More Relief for the Needy
- Direct Relief
- Federal Housing Administration government loans
for home mortgages - Agricultural Adjustment Act raise prices by
lowering production and loans to meet mortgages
97Critics
- Huey Long (Kingfish)
- Share the Wealth Program
- Tax Rich
- 5000 per family initially
- 2000 minimum annual income
- Government support for pensions, education, and
veterans benefits
FDR labels him as one of the two most dangerous
men in America!
98More Critics
- The great betrayer and liar, Franklin D.
Roosevelt, who promised to drive the money
changers from the temple, had succeeded only in
driving the farmers from their homesteads and the
citizens from their homes in the cities. . . I
ask you to purge the man who claims to be a
Democrat, from the Democratic Party, and I mean
Franklin Double-Crossing Roosevelt."
Father Coughlin 1/3 of Americans listened to his
weekly radio broadcasts
Economic Populist with an Anti-Semitic twist
99More Critics
Dr. Francis Townsend
200 per month per Senior Citizen
100Economic Reform
- National Recovery Act promote fair business
practices - Set competitive prices
- Establish work standards for hours and child
labor - Provide workers with the right to unionize and
conduct collective bargaining - Ruled unconstitutional (unanimously) by Supreme
Court Sick Chicken Decision
101Sick Chickens
- Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States (1935)
- Schecter Poultry was alleged to have sold unfit
chicken to a butcher. Schecter and the butcher
are both based in Brooklyn New York. Schecter did
no out of state business. - Schecter Poultry Co. was charged by the federal
government which argued that under the National
Industrial Recovery Act Schecter Poultry can be
regulated by the federal government which under
the NRA set up codes in cooperation with various
industries. - Schecter Poultry argued that the NIRA was
unconstitutional because the federal government
had no right to regulate intrastate trade. - The Supreme Court citing Gibbons v Ogden as the
precedent reversed the lower courts decision in
Schecter and struck down the NIRA as
unconstitutional. The Supreme Court thus said
reaffirmed the fact that the federal government
may not regulate intrastate trade only interstate
trade.
102More Programs
- Public Works Administration (PWA) provided money
to the states for school and public building
construction - Agricultural Adjustment Act raise prices by
lowering production - Subsidized scarcity or organized waste
- Creates more unemployment
- Taxing regulations ruled unconstitutional
103Dust Bowl
- Creates massive relocation of Plains farmers to
West Coast - Migrant farmers
- Regional protection from Okies
104Financial Reform
- Federal Securities Act requires companies to
- Provide complete factual financial information
about the company - Created rules for insider information
3/10/04 - Stewart convicted on all charges
105Tennessee Valley Authority
- Massive Project intended to
- Control flooding (20 dams)
- Generate electricity
- Stimulate impoverished region
- Create jobs
106SSA 1935
- Social Security Act provided
- Retirement insurance supplemental insurance for
retirees 65 or older - Unemployment compensation
- Aid to families with children and the disabled
- Financed by a payroll tax on employers and
employees
107Labor Reforms
- National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act)
- protects workers from unfair labor practices
- reaffirms the right to organize and bargain
collectively - Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO)
- John L. Lewis forms union of unskilled labor
- Successful with GM, USS
- Fair Labor Standards Act set modern labor rules
on hours, ages, and minimum wages
108 1936 Election Trivia
- FDR won 46 of 48 states
- 98.5 of Electoral Votes (two party record)
- FDR won almost 61 of popular vote (record at
that time) - George Gallup accurately predicated the winner
using a scientific poll for the first time - FDR believes the landslide equates to complete
public support for New Deal
109The Issue with the Court
- "A part of the problem of obtaining a sufficient
number of judges to dispose of cases is the
capacity of the judges themselves. This brings
forward the question of aged or infirm judges--a
subject of delicacy and yet one which requires
frank discussion. In exceptional cases, of
course, judges, like other men, retain to an
advanced age full mental and physical vigor.
Those not so fortunate are often unable to
perceive their own infirmities. . . A lower
mental or physical vigor leads men to avoid an
examination of complicated and changed
conditions. Little by little, new facts become
blurred through old glasses fitted, as it were,
for the needs of another generation older men,
assuming that the scene is the same as it was in
the past, cease to explore or inquire into the
present or the future." - FDR note to Congress proposing legislation to
allow the Executive to add judges to courts where
sitting judges were 70 or older and refused to
retire
110The Publics View
After 6 months of debate, Congress voted
against changing the Constitution. However, most
Court decisions after the debate supported New
Deal legislation.
111Keynesian Economics 1,2,3
- Modern economies are driven by demand for goods
and services. When demand is high, the economy is
healthy. When demand drops, the economy goes into
recession. - When an economy goes into recession, it might
recover by itself, but it might not. Sometimes
demand needs to be stimulated. - There are three segments of the economy that
drive demand, and each responds to different
stimuli - Consumers. For the most part, consumers simply
spend what they earn, so there's not much that
can be done to stimulate consumer demand (though
this has changed since 1936 see below for more
details). - Business. Spending by businesses can be
stimulated by lowering interest rates so that
loans for capital equipment are cheaper. This is
the first line of attack during a downturn. - Government. If that's not enough, government can
pick up the slack by running deficits and buying
more goods and services itself. This is the
second line of attack.
112More on Keynesian Economics
- Of course, the opposite is also true if the
economy is overheating, you can cool it down by
raising interest rates or running a budget
surplus. The basic idea is simply that aggregate
demand drives the economy, so the goal of fiscal
policy should be to manage demand in order to
achieve sustainable long term growth rates.
113(No Transcript)
114National Debt
- Debt doubles from 19.5 B to 40.4 B in eight
years! - Lots of critics
- Brain trust commies
- Pro Jewish
- Handout state
115Success or Failure?
No end to the Depression but what did it
accomplish?
116Long Term Impacts of the New Deal
- Deficit spending
- Expanding governments role in the economy
- Protection of workers rights
- Banking and Finance Reform
- Social Security
- Environmental protection
117End of the Depression?
- Although the New Deal programs relieved the
nations suffering and provided hope for the
American people.. - The massive spending for equipment and supplies
for WWII truly ended the Great Depression!!!
118Domestic Focus
- London Economic Conference 1933
- Attempt to develop a coordinated attack on the
Great Depression - Stabilize currencies and exchange rates
- Revive global trade
- US chooses to not participate
- Currency agreements would limit FDRs financial
recovery plans - Impacts of US non attendance?
119Foreign Policy Shifts
- Expensive imperialist policy
- Release Philippines (1946)
- Recognize Soviet Union
- Why?
- Trade and balance of power
- Good Neighbor Policy
- Abandon cousin Teddys corollary (no armed
intervention in Latin America) - Reciprocal Trade Agreements
- Reduce tariffs to increase free trade
- Reversed tariffprosperity trend
- Improved foreign relations
120Rise of the Dictators
- Causes
- Harsh treaty conditions
- Failed democracies
- Worldwide economic crisis
- Impacts
- Stalin Soviet Union
- Mussolini Italy
- Hitler - Germany
121U. S. Neutrality Acts1934, 1935, 1937, 1939
122U.S. Isolation or Intervention?
- League of Nations failure
- Isolationism 70 of Americans felt involvement
in WWI was a mistake - Neutrality Acts
- No sale or loans to nations at war
- No sale or loans to nations undergoing civil war
- Quarantine Speech
- Roosevelt urges 90 who want to live in peace to
isolate 10 who threaten a breakdown of
international law and order
123Appeasement The Munich Agreement, 1938
British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain
Now we have peace in our time! Herr Hitler is a
man we can do business with.
124The Nazi-SovietNon-Aggression Pact, 1939
Foreign Ministers von Ribbentrop Molotov
125Poland Attacked Sept. 1, 1939
9/3/39 Britain France Declare WAR!!
Blitzkrieg Lightening War
126America-First Committee
Charles Lindbergh
127U. S. Lend-Lease Act,1941
Great Britain.........................31
billionSoviet Union...........................11
billionFrance...................................
... 3 billionChina..............................
.........1.5 billionOther European..............
...500 millionSouth America...................4
00 millionThe amount totaled 48,601,365,000
128The Atlantic Charter
- Roosevelt and Churchill sign treaty of friendship
in August 1941. - Solidifies alliance.
- Fashioned after Wilsons 14 Points.
- Calls for League of Nations type organization.
129Why Attack Pearl Harbor?
- US Embargo on Japan
- No gasoline, oil, lubricants
- Freeze Japanese assets in American banks
- US Demands (to end embargo and restore trade)
- No further aggression end alliance with Germany
- Leave China and Indonesia
- US Beliefs
- Japan not prepared or strong enough to attack
- War only if attacked!