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MR. LIPMAN’S APUS POWERPOINT CHAPTER 39

MR. LIPMAN’S APUS POWERPOINT CHAPTER 39. The Era of the 1970s. Keys to the Chapter. Nixon (and then Ford) Presidency Economy Vietnam Supreme Court Watergate War Powers Act OPEC China and Russia Native Americans. Keys to the Chapter. Carter Presidency

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MR. LIPMAN’S APUS POWERPOINT CHAPTER 39

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  1. MR. LIPMAN’S APUS POWERPOINT CHAPTER 39 The Era of the 1970s

  2. Keys to the Chapter • Nixon (and then Ford) Presidency • Economy • Vietnam • Supreme Court • Watergate • War Powers Act • OPEC • China and Russia • Native Americans

  3. Keys to the Chapter • Carter Presidency • Stagflation (economy in a downward spiral) • Human Rights • OPEC Oil Embargo {round 2} • Camp David Accords • Shah of Iran • Doctrine (“strategic protection”) • Afghanistan (becomes Russia’s Vietnam)

  4. The Economic Problem • 1945 – 1970 – 25 years of economic growth • 1970s – no productivity gains • 1970 – 1990 – median family income stagnated ….but women into work force helps families move forward • Shift in economy from manufacturing to service

  5. Causes of the Economic Problem • Foreign Competition • Vietnam War expenditures • Inflation • Oil Price Skyrockets • LBJ’s War on Poverty expands entitlements END RESULT IS A LACK OF CONFIDENCE IN AMERICA BY AMERICANS FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HISTORY

  6. The Energy Crisis: Gasoline Prices

  7. Effects of the energy crisis • US built Alaskan pipeline to transport oil • National speed limit of 55 to conserve fuel • Increased use of coal and nuclear power • M. East became central to foreign policy

  8. The History of the Consumer Price Index, 1967–2000 Inflation becomes main enemy

  9. Nixon “Vietnamizes” the War • July 1969 – Nixon Doctrine • US would honor defense commitments but in future, others must fight their own wars ($ from America but not troops) • Nixon attacks the protestors • Appeals to “silent majority” who support war • My Lai massacre adds to disillusionment • War Expanded into Cambodia

  10. Marchers During Anti-Vietnam Moratorium November 15th, 1969

  11. The My Lai Massacre 1968

  12. Kent State May 1970

  13. The Aftermath of the Kent State Shootings

  14. Pentagon Papers • June 1971 – former official Daniel Ellsberg leaked secret study documenting mistakes and lies of Vietnam • Exposed the lie about Gulf of Tonkin • Supreme Court expands “No Prior Restraint” doctrine • All press begin to turn against Nixon

  15. Nixon’s “peace” in Vietnam • January 23, 1973 – Cease fire • US withdrew 27,000 remaining troops and reclaimed 560 prisoners of war • Nixon called the cease-fire “peace with honor” • Reality it was an American retreat • Nixon continued large-scale bombing of Cambodia • Repeatedly vetoes Congress attempt to stop bombing…will lead to passage of the War Powers Act in 1973

  16. Gruesome Reminder of the Pol Pot Regime, Cambodia 1976-79

  17. Victims of Cambodian Genocide, 1979

  18. Nixon Plays China against Russia in hopes of bringing about detente • February 1972 – Nixon traveled to China • US accepted “one-China” policy; lessened US commitment to Taiwan • May 1972 – Nixon traveled to Moscow • USSR willing to make deals with US • Fearful of US-backed China and needed US food • Era of Détente will grow

  19. President Nixon Inspects Assembled Chinese Soldiers with Premier Zhou Enlai

  20. 1972 – Nixon made 3 important agreements with China and USSR • 3-year agreement to sell USSR $750M grain • Anti-ballistic missile (ABM) treaty • Strategic Arms Limitations Talks (SALT) • Freezing of number of nuclear missiles for 5 years

  21. The Supreme Court of the 1960s • The Warren Court (1953-68) expanded civil liberties and the rights of criminal defendants • Mapp v. Ohio (1961) • Gideon v. Wainright (1963) • Griswold v. Connecticut (1965) • Miranda v. Arizona (1966) • NYTimes v. Sullivan (1964 1st amendment) • Engle v. Vitale (1962 school prayer case)

  22. Reynolds v. Sims (1964) will change politics • Some states had not reapportioned legislative districts in 60 years: Now must reapportion with each new census • Rural voters much more representation than urban voters (Ex. – an urban L. A. district had 6 million voters; another in rural California had only 14,000) • Court ruled that “one-man-one-vote” rule must apply (also Baker v. Carr)

  23. The Burger Court will eventually become more conservative after Roe v. Wade(1973) • Supreme Court in Griggs v. Duke Power Co. (1971) backed Nixon plan on affirmative action • Opened storm of criticism from critics who called it “reverse discrimination” • Milliken v. Bradley(1974) • Desegregation plans could not require students to move across school-district lines (“busing”) • Exempted suburban districts from burden of desegregation – helps bring about white flight

  24. California Regents v. Bakke (1978) • Court ruled that Bakke must be admitted -preferences in admissions could not be made based on ethnicity or race alone (No Quotas) • But, race could be used as part of a school’s overall admissions policy • Conservatives applauded the decision as a win against affirmative action

  25. Pro-Affirmative Action Cartoon

  26. Anti-Affirmative Action Cartoon

  27. Nixon wins election of 1972 in a landslide over George McGovern • Won every state but Massachusetts and District of Columbia • Watergate burglary the spring before the election had little impact on election but would later force Nixon from the Presidency

  28. October 1973 – Syrians and Egyptians (armed by USSR) launched surprise attack on Israel • Wanted territory lost in 1967 Six Day War • Israel quickly gains advantage and additional lands • US airlifted $2 billion in war materials to help Israel push back the invaders • OPEC will retaliate against America for this aid by imposing an embargo on oil shipments

  29. Many Gas Stations Closed on Sundays During the Gas Shortage in Order to Conserve Gas, 1973

  30. Watergate and the Unmaking of a President • June 17, 1972 – 5 men arrested in Watergate apartment-office complex • Trying to bug the Democratic headquarters • Working for Committee for the Re-election of the President (CREEP) • Washington Post reporters Woodward and Bernstein lead investigation and discover evidence of a “dirty tricks” campaign in 1972

  31. Vice President Spiro Agnew • October 1973 – forced to resign for taking bribes from a contractor as governor • Congress used 25th amendment (both houses confirmed Ford to replace him him) • When Nixon resigns same process will be used to name Nelson Rockefeller vice president

  32. 1973 – 1974 – Senate committee conducted televised hearings about Watergate • Nixon denied any prior knowledge • John Dean accused president and others of cover up • Alexander Butterfield revealed secret taping system • Nixon refused to produce the tapes • Supreme Court orders tapes produced and erasures are found on them • October 20, 1973 – “Saturday Night Massacre” • Nixon fired his own special prosecutor (Cox) appointed to investigate Watergate but Attorney General says no

  33. Republican leaders in Congress informed Nixon that impeachment was inevitable • August 8, 1974 – Nixon announced his resignation on TV • September 8, 1974 – Ford pardoned Nixon for any crimes committed as president • Democrats and the public were outraged

  34. Early 1975 – North Vietnam began drive to conquer South Vietnam • Ford asked Congress for more aid to South Vietnam • Congress refused • South Vietnam quickly collapsed • World watched on t.v. as people seek to escape • Eventually 500,000 Vietnamese arrived in US…referred to as “boat people”

  35. Vietnamese Evacuees Board an Air America Helicopter from the Top of a Building Near the U.S. Embassy, 1975

  36. Boat People Stranded off the Coast of Manila after Leaving Vietnam

  37. Final Word on Vietnam • Costs of the Vietnam war to US • $118 billion (in current US dollars) • 56,000 killed; 300,000 wounded • US lost self-esteem, confidence and economic power • Political institutions are challenged by citizens • Power of the presidency is questioned • Economy will be damaged for many years

  38. Feminist Victories and Defeats • 1972 – Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) has congressional approval but not ratified by necessary 38 states (3 short) • Reed v. Reed (1971 divorce case) • Court ends sex discrimination in legislation • Antifeminists blamed women’s movement for rising divorce rate • Religious Protestants and Catholics organized to oppose right to abortion

  39. Native Americans in the 1970s • Used tactics of civil rights movement to gain recognition as separate semi-sovereign peoples • As opposed to blacks who fought to be admitted into mainstream American society • 1970 – seized island of Alcatraz • 1972 – seized village of Wounded Knee, S. Dakota • 1978 – United States v. Wheeler • Indian tribes possessed “unique and limited” sovereignty, subject to Congress, but not individual states

  40. Results of the 1976 election {Carter v. Ford} • Carter won close election • Carter won every state except Virginia in South • 97% of blacks voted for Carter • Kept campaign promise to pardon thousands of draft evaders during Vietnam • Carter’s weaknesses • Relied too much on small group of Washington outsiders from Georgia • Angered Congress by not consulting with leaders

  41. September 1978 – Camp David Peace Accords • President Sadat (Egypt) and Prime Minister Begin (Israel) at Camp David in Maryland • Israel agreed to withdraw from territory conquered during 1967 Six Days War • Egypt promised to respect Israel’s borders and recognize its right to exist • Both sides promised formal peace treaty within 3 months

  42. 1979 – Carter restored full diplomatic relations with China, 1st time since 1949 • September 1977 – treaty handing over control of Panama Canal to Panama by 2000 • Many Americans felt betrayed • End of détente as relations with USSR worsened

  43. Economy Heads South • Unprecedented economic problems hit US economy under Carter (STAGFLATION) • Inflation • Trade deficits begin for the first time • Unemployment becomes a major problem • Increased foreign trade • 1970s –America can’t control economy the way it used to

  44. Carter believed most of US’s problems came from dependence on foreign oil • Announces military doctrine to protect “strategic” importance of oil to America’s future • Seizure of hostages in Iran {November 1979} weakens American confidence • Americans begin to question themselves and seek a return to the “good old days”

  45. Cars Line up for Gas During the 1979 Fuel Shortage

  46. US Hostages in Iran at Embassy

  47. Iranians Burn an American Flag

  48. December 27, 1979 – USSR invaded Afghanistan (next door to Iran) • Done to prop up communist government against Muslim militants • Appeared USSR was surrounding Middle East to control area’s oil • Insurgents, armed by American CIA, continue to resist & eventually Russia leaves in defeat • Costs of Invasion help bring about the collapse of the USSR

  49. US would use “any means necessary, including force” to protect Persian Gulf against Soviets (Carter Doctrine) - Boycott of summer Olympics in Moscow • 64 other nations followed US Election of 1980 will bring about a sweeping change in America and its politics {Swing to Conservatism with Reagan}

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