1 / 42

The Turning Tide: The Great Society and The Vietnam War

1947. 1975. The Turning Tide: The Great Society and The Vietnam War. CIVIL RIGHTS BEFORE LBJ. - Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kans.

haile
Download Presentation

The Turning Tide: The Great Society and The Vietnam War

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. 1947 1975 The Turning Tide: The Great Society and The Vietnam War

  2. CIVIL RIGHTS BEFORE LBJ • - Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kans. • 1955 - (Montgomery, Ala,) Bus boycott initiated after NAACP member Rosa Parks refuses to give up her seat at the front of the bus to a white passenger. • 1957 - (Little Rock, Ark.) Nine black students are blocked from entering the school by Governor. President Eisenhower sends federal troops and the National Guard to intervene on behalf of the students. • 1960 - (Greensboro, N.C.) Four black students from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College begin a sit-in at a segregated Woolworth's lunch counter. • 1961- Freedom riders, student volunteers on bus trips to test the implementation of new laws prohibiting segregation in interstate travel facilities.

  3. CIVIL RIGHTS AND LBJ • - (Washington, D.C.) About 250,000 people join the March on Washington. Reverend King delivers his famous "I Have a Dream" speech. • 1964 - President Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act of 1964, making segregation in public facilities and discrimination in employment illegal. • - Johnson sends military personnel to find bodies of three Mississippi civil-rights workers. • 1965 - March to Montgomery in support of voting rights are stopped at the Pettus Bridge by a police blockade. • - Congress passes the Voting Rights Act of 1965, making it easier for Southern blacks to register to vote. • - (Los Angeles, Ca.) Watts Riot • - (Memphis, Tenn.) Reverend King is shot •   - President Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act of 1968, prohibiting discrimination in the sale, rental, and financing of housing.

  4. The Texan’s Family

  5. LBJ’s Resume • Congressional Staffer • Member of the House of Representatives • U.S. Senator • Majority Leader • Vice-President

  6. “The Johnson Treatment” • Reputation of being “overpowering and intimidating” • Invaded personal space: nose to nose • “persuasive and personable rather than elegant and charming”

  7. The Texan’s Style

  8. The 1964 Election

  9. LBJ winning campaign Ad!

  10. The Results

  11. War Abroad Wars at Home: Vietnam and the Fracturing of America

  12. Civil Rights to Revolution: The Needs of theOther America. • Legal inequality versus de facto inequality • 22.1% poverty rate in 1960 • disproportionate numbers of racial minorities, women, elderly, and rural residents living in poverty • Identity Politics Movements • Cultural pride and raised awareness

  13. A Great Society and A War on Poverty “When I was young, poverty was so common that we didn’t know it had a name. An education was something that you had to fight for..It is now my opportunity to help every child get an education, to help every Negro and every American citizen have an equal opportunity to have every family get a decent home, and to help bring healing to the sick and dignity to the old. A Great Society, [ which] rests on abundance and liberty for all. It demands an end to poverty and racial injustice, to which we are totally committed.” President Lyndon B. Johnson, 1965

  14. Economic Opportunity Act 1965 • Economic Opportunity Act • (1965-1974) • 1 billion for the Office of • Economic Opportunity (10 programs) • Head Start • improve long-range • educational • achievements of poor • children • Upward Bound • help low-income • teenagers develop skills • needed for college • VISTA • domestic Peace Corps • teachers into poor school • districts

  15. Economic Opportunity Act 1965 Community Action Agencies Community Action was based on the premise of funding neighborhood groups directly, rather than following the ancient political custom of allowing mayors, governors, and members of Congress to determine how federal money is spent in their jurisdictions. 1,000 CAPs were created with boards comprised of one-third elected officials, one-third local business leaders, and one-third poor people

  16. Education emphasis on helping poor children Elementary and Secondary Education Act (1965) 1st federal-aid-to-education law $1.3 billion for textbooks, library materials, special education programs ***more money going to districts that had large proportions of students from poor families Higher Education Act (1965) $650 million for scholarships and low-interest loans to needy students funds for college libraries and research facilities

  17. Education Job Corps vocational training for school dropouts The Bilingual Education Act of 1968 minority language speakers provide school districts with federal funds to establish educational programs for students with limited English speaking ability Neighborhood Youth Corps give poor urban youths work experience and to encourage them to stay in school

  18. Environment The Wilderness Act of 1964 protected some 9 million acres of federal land. from corporation and private use. National Historic Preservation Act 1965 preserve historical and archaeological sites in the United States of America. The act created the National Register of Historic Places Water Quality Act of 1965 Required states to issue water quality standards for interstate waters monitored by feds! Air Quality Act 1967 expand federal government

  19. Welfare Aid to Families with Dependent Children 3 million to 10 million Food Stamps Program (1961-) $ 1 million (1961) $2 billion (1970s)

  20. Housing • Housing Act (1965) • $8 billion for low-and middle income housing • rent supplements for low- income families • new authority for families qualifying for public housing to be placed in empty private housing • Created Department of Housing and • Urban Development (1965)

  21. Medical Care Act (1965)) • Medicare • medical insurance for the elderly under social • security • Medicaid • health care for welfare recipients • $32 billion (1965-1975) • paid medical costs for 20% of Americans

  22. Transportation Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964 $375 million for large-scale urban public or private rail projects Highway Safety Act of 1966 Each State shall have a highway safety program approved by the Secretary, designed to reduce traffic accidents and deaths, injuries, and property damage

  23. Community Empowerment • Community Action Program • encouraged maximum feasible participation. • Legal Services Program • provided poor with free legal aid Social Security EXPANDED increased benefits established new programs to combat poverty

  24. Community Empowerment • Neighborhood Youth Corps • provided work to 2 million between 16-21 • 28% unemployed after 6 months of training • (1966-1967) • Public Broadcasting Act (1967) • to create educational television programs to supplement the broadcast networks. Government funded programs such as PBS and NPR • National Endowments for the Arts and the Humanities (1965) federal funding for artists and scholars

  25. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 I. Barred unequal application of voter registration requirements, but did not abolish literacy tests sometimes used to disqualify African Americans and poor white voters II. Prohibited racial discrimination in public places, such as theaters, restaurants and hotels III. Required employers to provide equal employment opportunities Projects involving federal funds could now be cut off if there was evidence of discriminated based on color, race or national origin.

  26. Immigration Act 1965 • LBJ and Ted Kennedy swept up in the new anti-discrimination • wave- Criticized 1920s ethnic quotas as chauvinism and racism • Abolished the national origins quota system that had structured American immigration policy since the 1920s - America was a low-immigration country favoring European based groups • Numerical restrictions on visas were set at 170,000 per year • Immediate family members of U.S. citizens and political refugees face no quotas

  27. Civil Rights Act 1965 outlawed discrimination in voting prohibits states from imposing any "voting qualification or prerequisite to voting, or standard, practice, or procedure ... to deny or abridge the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color.“ It outlawed literacy tests and poll taxes as a way of assessing whether anyone was fit or unfit to vote. Watts Riots

  28. Affirmative Action • (1965) EXECUTIVE ORDER • Banned discrimination on the basis of race, religion, and • national origin by employers awarded government • contracts (1/3 of labor force) • Required employers to .take affirmative action to ensure equal opportunity. • “to move beyond opportunity to achievement.[to achieve] not just equality as a right and theory, but equality as fact and as result.” • required employers to bring composition of labor • force into line with civil rights acts by hiring more minorities

  29. As he put down his pen, Johnson told an aide, "We have lost the South for a generation", anticipating a coming backlash from Southern whites against Johnson's Democratic Party.

  30. Civil Rights Act of 1968 commonly known as the Fair Housing Act I. prohibited discrimination in housing, The 1968 act expanded on previous acts and prohibited discrimination concerning the sale, rental, and financing of housing based on race, religion, national origin II. Extended constitutional protections to Native Americans on reservations

  31. The Economic “Miracle” • Capital and Labor

  32. Race and Poverty white, middle-class backlash 75% of poor were white and escaped poverty at a faster rate than blacks special interest legislation

  33. War on Poverty vs. War in Vietnam • $1.2 billion vs. $22 billion (1966) • < $2 billion/year vs. $2 billion/month • “If I left the woman I really love - the Great Society - in order to get • involved with that bleep of a war on the other side off the world, then I • would lose everything at home. All my programs. All my hopes to • feed the hungry and shelter the homeless. But if I left that war and • let the Communists take over South Vietnam, then I would be seen as • a coward and my nation would be seen as an appeaser and we would • both find it impossible to accomplish anything for anybody anywhere • on the entire globe..Losing the Great Society was a terrible thought, • but not so terrible as the thought of being responsible for America • losing a war to the Communists. Nothing could possibly be worse than • that.” – LBJ • The Great Society was “shot down on the battlefields of Vietnam”. • Martin Luther King, Jr.

  34. Overview of the Vietnam War • Longest war in U.S. • history (1965-1973) • 6.2 million tons of • bombs dropped by U.S. • 3x WWII • 2.8 million Americans served • 58,000 died • 11,000 MIA • 300,000 wounded • spent $150 billion

  35. U.S. Ground Troops

  36. THE SO-CALLED PEACE MOVEMENT 1967 Apr 10 - Vietnam Week starts.  Draft card burnings and anti-draft demonstrations Apr 15 - Anti-Vietnam War protest. 400,000 march from Central Park to UN. Oct 21-22 - Anti-war protesters storm the Pentagon 35,000 Demonstrate, 647 arrested Dec - "Stop the Draft" movement organized by 40 antiwar groups, nationwide protests ensue. Dec 5 - 1000 antiwar protesters try to close NYC induction center.  585 1968 Apr 23 - SDS lead students take over 5 buildings at Colombia Univ for a week. 700 arrested Jun 14 - Dr. Benjamin Spock convicted of conspiracy to abet draft evasion August 25-29 - Democratic Convention in Chicago  demonstration 10,000 1969 Feb 13 - 33 students arrested at admin bldg sit-in at Univ of Mass. Feb 18 - Students seize building and  boycott started at Howard University Feb 24 - Students occupy Admin bldg at Penn State Feb 27 - Police charge student picket lines, club and arrest two Chicano leaders at U.C. Berkeley Apr 9 - 300 Harvard students led by SDS seize Univ Hall and evict eight deans Apr 24 - U.S. B-52s launch biggest attack on North Vietnam. Protests in 40 cities Oct 8-11 - The Weatherman "Days of Rage" Oct 15 - Peace Day. 500,000 protesters nationwide. First Vietnam Moratorium

  37. THE SO-CALLED PEACE MOVEMENT 1970 Feb 19 - Explosions in 3 office buildings in NY; and in Calif; Wash; Maryland; Mich, possibly done by the Weathermen Mar 6 - Three Weathermen blow themselves up in Greenwich Village, NY May 4 - Four College Students Killed by National Guard at Kent State University, Ohio May 9 - 100,000 attend antiwar rally, Wash. D.C. May 14 - Police kill two at Jackson State during violent student demonstrations 1971Apr 19 - Over 1000  Veterans demonstrate against the Vietnam  war in Wash D.C., throwing their medals over the Capitol fence Apr 24 - Over 350,000 Veterans march in Wash D.C. and SF to protest war in Vietnam Apr 26 - 50,000 demonstrators in Washington D.C. set up "Algonquin Peace City" May 3 - May Day antiwar protest, Wash. D.C. 1972 Aug 23 - 1100 antiwar protest arrested outside Republican Nat'l Convention 19731974 1975

  38. The Traumas of 1968 • The King and Kennedy Assassinations • Memphis, April 4, 1968 • Los Angeles, June 6, 1968 Sirhan Sirhan James Earl Ray

  39. 1968 Election “The Conservative Response”

More Related