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The Roaring Twenties Part 2. Politics and Prosperity. 78. Karl Marx 1818 - 1883 Wrote the Communist Manifesto in 1848. 79. Communism. A political and economic ideology Government ownership of all land and property
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The Roaring Twenties Part 2 Politics and Prosperity
78 Karl Marx 1818 - 1883 Wrote the Communist Manifesto in 1848
79 Communism • A political and economic ideology • Government ownership of all land and property • A classless society where wealth is distributed according to people’s needs • A single political party controlled by the government • The country’s needs are always more important than the individual
80 Bolsheviks • Communists rebels who overthrew the Russian government in Nov. 1917 • Russian word for “majority” • Led by Vladimir Lenin • Their emblem was a red flag • Their army was called the Red Army
Vladimir Lenin –Leader of 1917 Bolshevik Revolution in Russia
81 The Red Scare • An intense fear of communism and other radical political ideas that spread through the U.S. in the 1920’s • Triggered by Communist take-over of Russia and Hungary and labor strikes in the U.S. • Suspected communists were arrested and charged with sedition • Many were jailed, removed from office, or exiled
Immigration During the 20’s • Emergency Quota Act said admission to the United States was based on immigrants’ ethnic identity and national origin. • National Origins Act of 1924 exempted Mexicans from the quota system
Sedition 82 Any action or language that incitesrebellion against the authority of the government
The Red Scare: Democracy in danger?
83 Anarchists People who oppose any form of political authority
84 Sacco-Vanzetti Trial • April 1920 – Braintree, MA • Guard and paymaster at a shoe factory were robbed and killed • 2 Italian immigrants were arrested • Convicted and sentenced to death • Many believed that it was fear of their radical anarchist political beliefs that led to an unfair verdict • April 1927 - Both were electrocuted after years of appeals
The American Civil Liberties Union • founded during the Red Scare (1919–1921) because the accused needed advocates to ensure their civil rights
Eugene Debs • Ran for president on a platform of socialism
85 Warren G. Harding • 29th President • 1921 – 1923 • Republican • From Ohio • Campaign called for a return to “normalcy”
“Normalcy” 86 Harding’s suggestion that the U.S. wished to return to a calm, normal way of life after the stressful events of the previous decade, such as Progressivism, World War I, and the Red Scare
87 Harding’s Policies • Isolationism – U.S. would not join the League of Nations • Disarmament – nations should voluntarily give up their weapons • Immigration restrictions • Tariffs raised to protect American business from foreign competition
88 Teapot Dome Scandal • Harding’s Secretary of the Interior, Albert Fall, gave drilling rights on government owned naval oil fields in Wyoming to 2 private oil companies • Received nearly $400,000 illegally • No evidence that Harding was involved • Fall was fined $100,000 and sentenced to a year in prison
Teapot Dome, Wyoming The Ohio Gang was blamed: Harding's buddies
Whom is this cartoonist blaming for the Teapot Dome scandal?
Effects of Scandals • began to have distrust for the elected officials
89 Calvin Coolidge • 30th President • 1923 - 1929 • Republican • Massachusetts • VP under Harding - Takes office when Harding dies in Aug. 1923 continued
89 Calvin Coolidge • A man of few words – “Silent Cal” • “The chief business of the American people is business.” • Took a laissez-faire approach to business • The government should leave business alone and let it grow
90 Kellogg-Briand Pact • 1927 - Agreement written by U.S. Secretary of State, Kellogg, and French Foreign Minister, Briand • 60 nations pledged not to use the threat of war against each other
Factors that led to the Boom • Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon persuaded Congress to stimulate the U.S. economy by Reducing federal taxes • Buying of Stock= Stocks allowed business to expand • New technologies (like the radio leading to consumerism and the automobile)
Consumer Economy 91 An economy that depends on a large amount of spending by consumers
92 Consumer Economy Cycle
93 GNP Increased • Gross National Product • The measure of a country’s productivity • The total value of goods and services produced annually
New Electric Gadgets Available to the American Consumer • Radios • Toasters • Vacuum cleaners • Sewing machines • Refrigerators • Coffee pots • Ovens • Irons
1920’s General Electric Electric Range
94 Henry Ford • 1896 – invented the quadricycle • 1899 – started the Detroit Automobile Company – made 22 cars • 1900 – business failed continued
94 Henry Ford • 1901 – There were over 50 companies making cars, but only the wealthy could afford them • Ford wanted to “democratize the automobile” by making them cheaper • 1903 – Started the Ford Motor Company • Mass produced the Model T using assembly line production
95 Assembly Line • A process in which each worker completes a single specific task in the production process • At the end of the line, the product is complete • Ford’s assembly line produced a Model T every 24 seconds
Question - How did Henry Ford convince investors to back his plan to produce cheap reliable cars after his first venture had failed?