1 / 9

Intolerance & Civil Liberties: Loss and Expansion of Liberty

This article explores the history of intolerance and civil liberties in the United States, from the ratification of the Bill of Rights in 1791 to the modern-day controversies surrounding reproductive rights and the Patriot Act. It examines the instances where intolerance led to a loss of liberty and those where it resulted in the expansion of liberties and rights.

dblanchard
Download Presentation

Intolerance & Civil Liberties: Loss and Expansion of Liberty

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. Intolerance & Civil LibertiesRed = loss of liberty/intolerance Black = expansion of liberties/rights • 1791: Bill of Rights ratified • 1798: Alien & Sedition Acts • 1828: Andrew Jackson’s election begins era of expanding voting to the common man • 1848: Seneca Falls convention • 1853: Know Nothing Party • Civil War: suspension of Habeas Corpus • 1868: 14th Amendment (equal treatment clause) • 1870: 15th Amendment gives black men the vote • Reconstruction: black codes and Ku Klux Klan • End of 19th Century: literacy tests, poll taxes, residence requirements

  2. Intolerance &Civil LibertiesRed = loss of liberty/intolerance Black = expansion of liberties/rights • 1917: Espionage Act, Sedition Act; affirmation in Schenck v U.S. • 1919: Red Scare • 1920: 19th Amendment gives women the vote • 1920s: Ku Klux Klan, Sacco & Vanzetti, Immigration act of 1924 • WWII: Japanese-American Internment; Korematsu decision • 1950s: McCarthyism • 1953-1969: Warren Court rulings • 1964: 24th Amendment outlaws the poll tax • 1965: Griswold v. Connecticut gives right to privacy • 1971: 26th Amendment lowers voting age to 18 • 1973: Roe v. Wade expands reproductive rights • 1989: Webster v. Reproductive Health Services (and 1991’s Casey v. Planned Parenthood) restricts reproductive rights • 2001: Sept. 11 attacks and the Patriot Act

  3. Rise of Political Parties • 1792: Creation of first parties; split into Federalists & Democratic-Republicans • “The Bank”

  4. Anti-federalistsvsFederalists • Poorer classes; Western; rural; farmers & frontier folk • State’s Rights devotees opposed the stronger federal government • Thomas Jefferson; Sam Adams, Patrick Henry & Richard Henry Lee • Alarmed by the lack of a Bill of Rights; Demanded one for Constitutional passage • The “Establishment”; East Coast; merchants & manufacturers; Wealthier; more educated • War & Shay’s Rebellion convinced them of need for more gov’t power • George Washington, Ben Franklin, James Madison • Promised a bill of rights by amendment

  5. From two to one and back to two… • 1816: begin Era of Good feelings (Federalists fade away) • 1824: controversial election of John Quincy Adams splits country into Whigs and Democrats

  6. Democratic-Republicans become Democrats and Whigs appear Democrats • Favor local rule & limited government • Free trade (low tariffs) • Equal economic opportunity (for white males) • Distrust of elite (bankers & industrialists especially) • Southerners, westerners, small farmers, urban workers Whigs (early 1830s to mid-1850s) • Favor Henry Clay’s American System (national bank, a high protective tariff, & federal funding of internal improvements) • Make moral issues part of policies: oppose immorality, vice & crime (some of which they blame on immigrants) • New Englanders & mid-Atlantic & upper-Mid-West; Protestants (of old-English heritage); middle-class urban professionals

  7. Return to Two (or more) Political Parties • 1840-1854: Several third parties in response to immigration (American) and the lack of resolution to slavery (Liberty, Free Soil, Republican) • 1860: first electoral victory of modern Republican party (Whigs gone by now) • 1890s: Populists

  8. Political Parties • 1900-1920: Progressives in both Democrat and Republican parties (brief Bull Moose Party) • 1936: Democrats become the new majority as a result of FDR’s new coalition (ends long era of Republican rule) • 1948: Dixiecrats • 1968: American Independent Party and realignment of the South (after Democrats pass the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights Act) • 1980/1994: Reagan’s election (1980) and Republicans retake Congress (1994) usher in the “New Right”

  9. Political Parties • 1860-1932: Republican dominance of the presidency (only Democratic exceptions are Grover Cleveland & Woodrow Wilson) • 1932-1980: Democratic Dominance of the Presidency (only Republican exceptions are Dwight Eisenhower and Richard Nixon; but is Jimmy Carter in 1976a fluke of Watergate?)

More Related