1 / 25

Chapter 28

Chapter 28. Affluence and Its Discontents, 1954-1963. Web. Foreign Policy, 1954-1960. The New Look Less reliance on expensive ground forces Greater reliance on airpower, advanced nuclear capabilities, and covert action Massive retaliation

vera
Download Presentation

Chapter 28

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. Chapter 28 Affluence and Its Discontents, 1954-1963 Web

  2. Foreign Policy, 1954-1960 • The New Look • Less reliance on expensive ground forces • Greater reliance on airpower, advanced nuclear capabilities, and covert action • Massive retaliation • Threat of U.S. atomic weaponry would hold communism in check • International alliances • Expanded NATO to include West Germany (1955) • Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (1954) • Central Treaty Organization (1959)

  3. Foreign Policy 1954-1960 (cont.) • Psychological warfare and informational programs • Voice of America • Radio Free Europe • Radio Liberation (directly to the Soviet Union) • Radio Asia • Arms limitation • “Open Skies” proposal, 1955

  4. Covert Action and Economic Leverage • Focus of Cold War shifted to Third World • Use of CIA covert action around the world • Thereafter, CIA grew enormously in influence and power • Trade and aid

  5. America and the Third World • Latin America • Talked of supporting democracy • Regularly supported dictatorial regimes so long as they accepted U.S. investment • Caused resentment among Latin Americans • Cuba situation demonstrated anti-American sentiment • Egypt • Rise of Gamal Abdel Nasser • Call for Arab nationalism and “positive neutralism” • Nationalization of Suez Canal, 1956 • Caused U.S. rift with Britain • Loss of U.S. prestige and Power in Middle east

  6. America and the Third World (cont.) • Middle East • Eisenhower Doctrine, 1957 • Defense of Middle Eastern countries against “international communism” • Followed up with intervention in Lebanon and Jordan • Vietnam • Drive for independence under way after World War II • French decided to withdraw in 1954 { Dien Bien Phu} • Geneva Peace Accords • Temporary division in North and South Vietnam • Eventual elections for reunification • Administration belief in “domino theory” • Provided aid to government in south Vietnam • Feared the loss of another Asian nation to communism

  7. Affluence – “A People of Plenty” • Highways and waterways • Highway Act of 1956 • First centrally planned transportation in nation’s history • Dams, irrigation canals, reservoirs • Transformed western agriculture • Created huge governmental bureaucracies • Environmental consequences • Labor-management accord

  8. Affluence –”A People of Plenty” (cont.) • Retreat from labor demands for “management prerogatives” • Focus on wages and fringe benefit issues • Disavowal of wildcats • Real economic gains for most workers • American standard of living became envy of world • Political pluralism • Exaltation of role of religion in American life • Multi-Denominational emphasis • Reverence and celebrity for individual religious leaders

  9. ©2004 Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license. Steady Growth of Gross National Product, 1940-1970

  10. Discontent among Affluence • Conformity • Cultural critics condemned lack of individuality in American society • William H. Whyte, Jr., The Organization Man (1955) • David Riesman, The Lonely Crowd (1950) • Vance Pickard, The Hidden Persuaders (1957) • Youth Culture • Increasing concerns about young people • Rock ‘n’ roll music • Mass Culture • Critics decried mass-marketed products • Fear that “bad” art was driving “good” from the marketplace • Television became a prominent target of social critics • Decried both quality of programming and its impact on the public

  11. The Fight Against Discrimination • Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954) • School segregation violated constitutional guarantee of equal protection under the law • Implied that all segregated public facilities were unconstitutional • Race could no longer be treated as simply a regional issue • South becoming more like rest of the country • Racial composition of rest of country becoming more like South • Segregationists promised “massive resistance” to Brown • Violence, vigilantism, terror became rampant • Montgomery bus boycott, 1955-56

  12. The Fight Against Discrimination (cont.) • Vaulted Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. into national prominence • Spurred creation of Southern Christian Leadership Conference • Civil Rights Act of 1957 • procedure to expedite lawsuits by African Americans who claimed their voting rights had been violated • Created permanent Civil Rights Commission to hear complaints • Politics of civil rights • Southern Democrats in Congress tried to block real action on civil rights • Southern states defied Brown order on school desegregation • Eisenhower forced to act in Little Rock crisis, 1957

  13. ©2004 Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license. Shifts in African American Population Patterns, 1940-1960

  14. American Indian Policy • Eisenhower lacked a coherent policy • Termination • Treat Indians as individuals rather than members of a tribe • Relocation • Encourage Indians to leave reservations and take jobs in urban areas • Programs had disastrous consequences for Indians

  15. ©2004 Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license. Total urban and Rural Indian Population in the U.S. 1940-80

  16. Growth of Spanish-Speaking Populations • Large numbers of immigrants from Puerto Rico and Mexico • Bracero program encouraged emigration of agricultural workers • “Operation wetback” • Mass Deportations of Mexican immigrants • Organizations appeared to crusade for better treatment for immigrants • League of United Latin American Citizens • Unity League • Increased concentration in cities rather than rural areas

  17. Emergence of Urban Issues • Growth of suburbs created new urban issues • Redlining contributed to decay of inner cities • Urban renewal often amounted to “urban removal” • Public housing proved a grave disappointment • New and Fair deal urban programs considered failures by end of 1950s

  18. Debates over Government’s Role in the Economy • Eisenhower and the new conservatives • Ike’s centrist policies eared ire of political conservatives • Barry Goldwater, Conscience of a Conservative,(1960_ • William F. Buckley, Up From Liberalism (1959) • Advocates of a more active government • Liberals criticized Eisenhower for failing to use government power to address pressing public issues

  19. Debates over Government’s Role in the economy (cont.) • Especially critical of failure to address racial discrimination • Others criticized apparent shortcomings in national security policy • Gaither Report (1957) warned of holes in the nation’s defenses • Education policy also came in for scrutiny • Rudolph Flesch, Why Johnny Can’t Read (1955) • National Defense Education Act (1958) • Calls for increased social welfare spending • John Kenneth Galbraith, The Affluent Society (1958)

  20. The Election of 1960 • Democrats ran John F.Kennedy • New Frontier • Support for civil rights • Social programs • Tax cuts and deficit spending • Heavy defense spending and “flexible” response to communist threat • Republicans ran Richard M. Nixon • Remained on defensive throughout campaign • Performed poorly in first of several televised debates • Kennedy won narrow electoral victory

  21. ©2004 Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license. Presidential Election, 1960

  22. Kennedy’s Foreign Policy • Dramatic Initiatives • Peace Corps • Alliance for Progress • Cuba • Bay of Pigs, April 1961 • Operation Mongoose • Cuban Missile Crisis, October 1962 • Berlin • Berlin Wall constructed, August 1961 • Southeast Asia • Goal to build South Vietnam into a viable non-Communist state • Test case for flexible response • Coup against Ngo Dinh Diem, November 1963

  23. Kennedy’s Domestic Policy • General policymaking goals • Tax cuts for everyone, special cuts for corporations • Higher minimum wage and urban renewal • Crusade against organized crime (Robert Kennedy) • Civil Rights • Concerned about Southern conservatives • Initially, did nothing on civil rights front • Sit-in movement, early 1960 • Freedom rides, 1961 • Forced to send marshals to protect riders • Universities of Mississippi and Alabama • Forced to intervene to protect black students • Executive order banning segregation in public housing, November 1952

  24. Kennedy’s Domestic Policy (cont.) • Moderate civil rights bill, February 1963 • Called to action by violence in Birmingham, Spring of 1963 • Support for stronger civil rights bill • March on Washington, August 1963 • Women’s issues • Presidential Commission on the Status of women • Documented discrimination in employment opportunities and wages • Equal Pay Act of 1963

  25. The Assassination of John F. Kennedy • Shot in Dallas on 22nd November, 1963 • Official report blamed Lee Harvey Oswald as lone assassin • Conspiracy theories and uncertainties remain decades later Web

More Related