1 / 19

Social Problems

Quest :. Social Problems. Lecture 9: June 25. Announcements. Study for Test 3 tomorrow Review organization of slides (so you can LOOK UP ANSWERS) Review “Study Guide” at beginning of each slideshow Practice explaining each item IN YOUR OWN WORDS

toril
Download Presentation

Social Problems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Quest: Social Problems Lecture 9: June 25

  2. Announcements • Study for Test 3 tomorrow • Review organization of slides (so you can LOOK UP ANSWERS) • Review “Study Guide” at beginning of each slideshow • Practice explaining each item IN YOUR OWN WORDS • Practice coming up with examples of each item • Finish writing your Project Report • IF you’re submitting Essay 3

  3. Study guide • Vocab • Military-industrial complex • Terrorism • Blowback • Concepts • List of reasons for war (numbered), examples • Why did America rise to global leadership after WWII? • How does war inspire national identities? • Why might war be a part of the American identity?

  4. War and terrorism • Quick worksheet: Reasons for some wars, and for US involvement? • Just brief answers. “Official” reasons given by the government. • We will review in a few minutes, then draw out some common themes…

  5. Why we fight: general causes • Textbook lists many; I add a couple more… 1. Perceived threats (like US vs. USSR in 1962 after Bay of Pigs)

  6. Why we fight: general causes 2. Cultural/religious differences Examples: Many genocides like Balkan conflict in the 1990s, Manifest Destiny vs. Cherokees during Trail of Tears…

  7. Why we fight: general causes 3. Political objectives Ex.: US entering Persian Gulf War to “stabilize the region” (clip 3 Kings?)

  8. Why we fight: general causes 4. Moral objectives Ex.: US in Vietnam, saving people from Communism

  9. Why we fight: general causes 5. Wealth, power, and global standing Ex.: Hussein invading Kuwait in 1990 (clip from 3 Kings?)

  10. Why we fight: general causes 6. Distract from social problems Ex.: China vs. Korea to distract public from internal problems. Some say this about Putin and Ukraine.

  11. Why we fight: general causes 7. Military-industrial complexin U.S. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8y06NSBBRtY We go to war to • benefit defense companies (more $$ for industry and/or rich owners)… • and/or to justify big defense budgets (more power for military officials).

  12. Why we fight: general causes • Mutually exclusive? An example of overlap? • Is there anything in common beneath all of them?

  13. Why we fight: broad trends? • Samuel P. Huntington (remember him) suggests in Clash of Civilizations • Among monarchs • Among nations (French Revolution to WWII) • Among cultural ideologies (Russian Revolution to Nazism to Cold War • Among religious ideologies (Jihad) • Sam sees conflict getting worse as it gets more cultural. He argues that cultures can’t compromise…

  14. War and america • Have American wars been based on perceived threats to American lives? OR • Have they been based on perceived threats to American morals? • Christianity, capitalism, American global superiority… • Maybe war is an essential part of America’s identity?

  15. War and America and the globe • Historically, war catapulted America to economic and political leadership: • Globalization begins with WWII • America as “breadbasket” • America as banker • America and the UN

  16. Whose war is it anyway: their war • Growing disenchantment has led people to question war as an American moral value. • Vietnam • Iraq • “Old men lie and young men die.”

  17. Whose war is it anyway: our war • Still, the masses of a country very often feel an intense and meaningful connection to the wars their elites get them into. • Chris Hedges’ War is a Force that Gives Us Meaning: • War inspires nationalism, social solidarity, excitement… • Media glorifies war: excitement, courage, brotherhood…

  18. War and terrorism: blowback • Al Qaeda: what is their mission, where, why? • Al Qaeda history: mujahideen, commies and Rambo • Blowback definition • Third-world peoples have seen this blowback coming against us for decades.

  19. Social problem of war • Is war a problem we can end? How? Social problem of peace • Or is war the answer to a social problem question we haven’t asked?

More Related