AP US History
So, I'll start a revolution from my bed, because you said the brains I had went to my head.
Monday, April 11, 2011
Chapter 37. 57 - 60.
57. After UN security council condemned N. Korea as an aggressor, Truman sent American aid to S. Korea to help.
58. The U.S was officially campaigning UN's police action, but was mainly just obeying Washington's orders, not UN's
59. MacArthur's error was underestimating the strength of China's fighting ability. His loss resulted in a blockade of Chinese coast and bombing of Chinese bases in Manchuria. This action was at odds with the administration policies because the U.S did not want nor need to widen Korean conflict and chance a war with the USSR.
60. Truman fired MacArthur because he refused to quit fighting the Korean war in China.
Monday, March 21, 2011
President Hoover's Fisrt Moves and The Great Crash Ends the Golden Twenties
73. The unorganized wage earners and disorganized farmers did not share in the prosperity of the 1920's
74. The Agricultural Market Act of 1929 was designed to help farmers by creating co-ops, set up the Federal Farm Board - which gave money to farm organizations that needed it.
75. In 1930 the Farm Board created the Grain Stabilization Corporation and the Cotton Stabilization Corporation, with a goal of bolstering sagging prices by buying surpluses of crops - resulted in wheat prices dropping to 57 cents and cotton to 5 cents.
76. The Hawley - Smoot Tariff of 1930 was designed to assist the farmers. After the lobbyists' efforts, it acquired 1000 amendments - and turned out to be the highest protective tariff during times of peace. It raised the average duty from 38.9% to 60%.
77. The Negative effects of Hawley-Smoot:
a) on foreigners - Badly hurt them by the rising tariff duties
b) Reversed the world's reasonable tariff trend
c) Helped plunge America - and the world - into depression
d) Forced America further into economic isolationism
e) The economic isolationism played into the hands of Hitler
78. The Catastrophic crash came on October 29, 1929 - That day 16,410,030 shares of stocks were sold. Stock holders lost $ 40 billion in paper value.
79. In relation to the rest of the world, America's depression was the worst.
80. Jobs became non existent for millions of Americans.
81. The collapse of thousands of banks each year affected ordinary Americans by carrying down their life savings.
Now on to Jacob's blog.
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
The Dynamic Decade - It's Sex O' Clock, America!
The 1920's in America brought in a whole new lifestyle. For the first time ever, the majority of Americans live in urban areas, not the country. The 1920's was also a time for pushing the boundaries. Margaret Sanger campaigned for the acceptable use of contraceptives, and Alice Paul's national Women's Party fought for an equal rights amendment to the constitution.
Fundamentalist churches also found themselves branching out a bit more. In fact, God was a pretty good guy, and the earth was a pretty chummy place to live. Church advertisement also sprung about. Church sayings plastered all over bill boards and posters.
A new sexual wave also made its way into America in the 1920's, with teenagers leading the front. Young women took on new identities as flappers with their bobbed dresses, elevated hemlines, rolled stockings, breasts taped flat, cheeks rouged, and crimson lips that help a cigarette. For many of them, the flapper identity represented independence in their coming of age as young women.
Young women and men would stay out late in dark movie theater corners, closed in cars, and dance joints... and I'm betting you get the picture. Older men and women were shocked at this radical turn in culture that they were not used to at all.
Jazz music was the anthem of the new sexual frontier with its smooth beats and riveting turns in styles and instruments. Jazz moved up from New Orleans from black culture. Musicians like handy, Jelly Roll Morton, and Joe King Oliver gave birth to the jazz music.
Racial pride in Northern black communities also came of age, particularly in Harlem. Harlem was a vibrant creative culture that produced people like poet Langston Hughes politician Marcus Garvey, who founded the United Negro Improvement Association.
Monday, March 7, 2011
Chapter 31 Questions 7 - 12
7. Wilson had to shatter the "sacred tradition" of American Isolationism by entangling America in a distant European war, one which the majority of Americans longed to stay out of. (WWI)
9. In response to his lack of support, Wilson had to muster together some glorified aims (goals).
10. These goals were; "a war to end war" (which means to fight to cease the fighting) and "A crusade to make the world safe for democracy.
11. Wilson was very sincere in his efforts to gather support, and all his hard work, and sincerity, payed off. Wilson rallied much support from practically everyone; Americans, Allies, and even the Germans supported some of Wilson's goals from his 14 - point plan (some one will discuss later on in further depth).
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Progressive Era Foreign Policy Acts
The Panama Canal Tolls Act of 1912 had previously excused America from paying tolls on coast wise Britain. This Act was repealed in 1914 under the Wilson presidency.
The Jones Act of 1916 was signed under the Wilson presidency as well, it promised to give the Philippines their full independence when they had reached a position of stable government.
Conservation and Land Use Acts
The Desert Land Act of 1877 allowed the government to sell dried out land at cheap rates if that in return the buyer irrigated the land.
The Forest Reserve Act of 1891 allowed for the president to set aside areas of forests and other areas as national parks and reserves.
The Carey Act of 1894, sort of like the Desert Land Act, allowed the government to sell land to states in condition that they irrigate the land.
The Newlands Act of 1902 provided government revenue from the sale of dried out Western lands, and the government would use this money to develop irrigation systems.
The progressives valued the idea of conservation, they respected the land and didn't want to just use it all up. However, they did believe in land efficiency, and that they could use conservation methods to harness energy from the land without harming it.
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