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Chapter 21. Discontent & Experimentation. Weakness within the democracies . Great britain. Decline of empire Economy in trouble: trade down, debt up, unemployment, protective tariffs Welfare state Allowed independence of some colonies
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Chapter 21 Discontent & Experimentation
Great britain • Decline of empire • Economy in trouble: trade down, debt up, unemployment, protective tariffs • Welfare state • Allowed independence of some colonies • Statute of Westminster 1931 declared Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa to be “autonomous communities within the British Empire.”
france • Heavy losses in WWI • Greater economic recovery: New factories, added territory, less unrest among workers • Political instability: 40 prime ministers in 20 years between 1920 and 1940 • Socialist and Communist parties gained support. • Formed more defensive alliances to protect against Germany. • Construction of the Maginot Line
Maginot line • Along French/German border • 560 miles long • Underground chambers with power stations, ammo supplies, hospitals, theaters, living quarters. • Confident that the Line would stop any German advance.
Tank Defenses on the Maginot Line (in snow) Cutaway Diagram of Maginot Line Defenses
The united states • “Return to normalcy” • Isolation • Decay in the moral life of the nation (Roaring 20s) • Stock market crash 1929 • Debts of European Countries affecting U.S. economy
The united states • Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) – 1932
The new Deal • Offered government solutions to economic problems. • Works Progress Administration (WPA) • Agricultural Adjustment Administration • Securities and Exchange Commission • Civilian Conservation Corps. • Helpful or Harmful? • Increased the power of the federal bureaucracy.
Through eyes of faith • What reason does the Bible give for the continued existence of the Jews despite the many attempts to destroy them? • Romans 11:1,5, 26-29
Characteristics of totalitarian states • Use of propaganda • Use of secret police to eliminate opposition • Emphasizes the state rather than the individual • State control of every aspect of life • Maintains government by force • One-party political system with dictator
Prominent 20th Century totalitarian states • Russia/Soviet Union – Lenin & Stalin • Italy - Mussolini • Germany - Hitler • Japan- Tojo
Germany • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZQ4yQDIf5k
Communism in russia • Romanov czars were oppressive • Poverty • Censorship • Persecution of national groups (Poles, Finns, Jews) • Forced “Russianization” of peoples • Other countries were becoming open, free, democratic, but not Russia.
Peasants in Czarist Russia.
Communism in russia • Discontent turns into revolution. “Soviets in Action” 1918 photo by John Reed
Communism in russia • Social Democratic Party with two factions: • Mensheviks hoped to bring change through peaceful measures. • Bolsheviks believed violence was necessary to change in Russia.
Communism in russia • Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905) – unpopular with the people, brought Russian discontent to the surface. • The Russians were somewhat humiliated and lost territory to the Japanese.
Communism in russia • Bloody Sunday 1905 – a peaceful protest turns violent when government soldiers open fire on the protesters. • This event further erodes support for the Czar. • Peasant uprisings, strikes, mutiny in the military. • Workers organize a soviet (council).
Communism in russia • Russia’s participation in WWI also stirred unrest. • Russians were dying in large numbers fighting the Germans. • They were unprepared to fight a war. • Food was in short supply in the cities because it was being sent to the soldiers. • When people are hungry, they get mad.
rasputin • A strange Russian Orthodox monk who believed and taught that the only way to reach God was by sinning and then gaining forgiveness. • See Romans 6:1-2. • Rasputin influenced the Czarina Alexandra. • His corruption and influence on the Czar weakened support for the Czar even more. • He was murdered by Russian nobles.
The revolution • March 8, 1917 – workers overthrow local authorities in St. Petersburg. • Czar tries to disband the Duma (national assembly) • March 15, 1917 – Czar Nicholas II abdicates, ending 300 years of Romanov rule. Portrait of the Czar slashed in a riot at the beginning of WWI
Sought to get Russia out of WWI immediately. • Wanted to implement radical social reforms. • Germans sent exiled Bolsheviks back to Russia to make trouble for the Mensheviks.
Founding of the ussr • Vladimir Lenin – leader of the Bolsheviks • Believed in absolute necessity of violent revolution. • Believed that communism would spread when workers rose up everywhere under strong leadership. • “Dictatorship of the proletariat” • In reality – only a dedicated few would wield great power.
Nov. 7, 1917 the Bolsheviks seize the government in St. Petersburg. • Government officials are arrested. • Lenin is the dictator.
Reasons for lenin’s success • People wanted an immediate end to WWI, which the Bolsheviks supported. • Discipline among the military was low; no troop support for officers • People expected immediate solutions to Russia’s economic problems. • When the provisional government (after the czar abdicated) couldn’t deliver, people supported Lenin & the Bolsheviks.
Russian civil war (1918-1921) • Leon Trotsky organized the Red Army, the military of the Bolsheviks. • Opponents of the Bolsheviks were called the “Whites.” They had the support of the Allies including the U.S. • Communists won. Trotsky
Russia becomes communist • Capital moved from St. Petersburg to Moscow. • Lenin died in 1924. • Country renamed Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) • Central government controlled the 10 republics in the federation. • People still have no voice.
Communist ussr – War Communism (civil war) • Nationalized Russian industry • Demanded peasants give surplus crops to the government • People were forced to work • No incentives to produce • The economy went into steep decline.
Communist ussr • The government abandons “war communism” in favor of the New Economic Policy. • Retreat from communism so people wouldn’t overthrow the communist government. • Allowed some capitalism • Economy recovers somewhat.
Strengthening of the ussr • Power struggle between Leon Trotsky and Jozef Stalin. • Stalin won out, established as dictator 1927.
Five year plans • Government production goals. • Turn back to socialism. • Shortages • Inefficient • Mismanagement • Resistance from the people. • Stalin cracks down. • Secret police • Abuse p. 554. • Famine
Results of 5 year plans • Some Western countries turned to planned economies in the wake of the Great Depression • The state tightened its grip over the Russian people. • No liberty.
Reign of terror • Stalin’s purges – 800,000 Communist party members murdered. • Attempt to wipe out Christianity. Read Lenin quote page 555. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PIj9BdkS46E&feature=related • From a documentary on Stalin’s Purges.
Spread of communism • The goal of the Soviets was to spread communism to the rest of the world. • Comintern – Communist International stirred up discontent in other countries to foment revolutions.
Italy • Fascism • (German fascism is called nazism.) • The fascists feared communism and promised stability & security. • People’s lives are restricted and controlled by the government in almost all aspects in both communist and fascist countries.
Comparing: • Industry owned by government • Seeks a classless, international society • “Dictatorship of the Proletariat” • Ideally, the state will wither away and become unnecessary • Business privately owned, controlled by government • Nationalistic society • Governed by a military dictatorship • Glorifies the state Communism Fascism
Italian disappointment • After WWI: • Italy wanted to dominate the Adriatic Sea. • Italy wanted control of Albania • Italy wanted some of Germany’s former colonies. (Britain & France took them.) • Italians feared communist agitators. • Socialists paralyzed the government. • Little land was available to the poor. • Strikes by labor unions brought industry to a standstill.
italy • Italy had lost 500,000 men in WWI and gained little in return. • Economy was in trouble: strikes, inflation, unemployment, debt. Benito Mussolini
mussolini • Son of a blacksmith • Young socialist • Jailed because of violent newspaper articles • Supported Italy’s involvement in WWI.
Fascist party • Took its name from the fasces the symbol of power and authority in the ancient Roman empire. A fascist fez with the symbol of the fasces, worn by the Black Shirts