Thursday, April 9, 2015

Chapter 36 and 37 Outlines


Chapter 36 and 37 Outlines
The Cold War Begins 1945-1952
I. Postwar Economic Anxieties
·      During the 1930s joblessness and insecurity caused suicide rates to increase and marriage rates to decrease
·      Gross National Product  (GNP) slumped between 1946-1947
·      Strikes swept the country
·      Taft-Hartley Act outlawed the “closed” shop, made unions liable for damages that resulted from jurisdictional disputes among them selves and required union leaders to take a non communist oath.
·      Employment Act of 1946- made it government policy to “promote maximum employment, production, and purchasing power”
·      GI Bill sent former soldiers to school because they were worried that the work force could not take in a whole bunch of ne ex military workers
II. The Long Economic Boom 1950-1970
·      GNP began to increase
·      National income nearly doubled in the 1950s and almost doubled again in the 1960s
·      6% of the world’s people (Americans) had about 40% of the planet’s wealth
·      By the end of the 1950s nearly 90 percent of American families owned a television set
·      Women’s jobs became more frequent and easier to get
III. The Roots of Postwar Prosperity
·      Defense spending accounted for 10 percent of the GNP during the 1950s.
·      The government helped industries such as aerospace, plastics, and electronics
·      Americans doubled their consumption of inexpensive and seemingly inexhaustible oil in the twenty five years after the war
·      The work force continually left the farm to work in the industries, but this was all right because farmers, with new technologies, could produce large quantities of food with very little work force.
IV. The Smiling Sunbelt
·      Families began to spread apart as technologies increased
·      People started moving westward again (as seen by California which has one of every 8 Americans)
·      This dramatic shift of population allowed for the sunbelt to gain political foothold and strength. Every elected occupant of the White House from 1964 to 2008 hailed from the sunbelt
V. The Rush to the Suburbs
  • Whites in cities fled to the suburbs, encouraged by federal
    agencies such as the Federal Housing Authority and the Veteran’s
    Administration, whose loan guarantees made it cheaper to live in the
    suburbs than in cramped city apartments
  • By 1960, one out of ever four Americans lived in the suburbs.
  • Innovators like the Levitt brothers, with their monotonous but
    cheap housing plans, built thousands of houses in projects like
    Levittown, and the “White flight” left the cities full of
    the poor and the African-Americans.
  • Federal agencies aggravated this by often refusing to make loans to
    Blacks due to the “risk factor” involved with this.
VI. The Postwar Baby Boom
  • After the war, many soldiers returned to their sweethearts and
    married them, then had babies, creating a “Baby Boom” that
    would be felt for generations.
  • As the children grew up collectively, they put strains on
    respective markets, such as manufacturers of baby products in the 1940s
    and 50s, teenage clothing designers in the 60s, and the job market in
    the 70s and 80s.
  • By around 2020, they will place enormous strains on the Social Security system.
VII. Truman: the “Gutty” Man from Missouri
  • Presiding after World War II was Harry S. Truman, who had come to
    power after Franklin Roosevelt had died from a massive brain
    hemorrhage.
  • The first president in a long time without a college education,
    Truman at first approached his burdens with humility, but he gradually
    evolved into a confident, cocky politician.
  • His cabinet was made up of the old “Missouri gang,”
    which was composed of Truman’s friends from when he was a senator
    in Missouri.
  • Often, Truman would stick to a wrong decision just to prove his decisiveness and power of command.
  • However, even if he was small on the small things, he was big on
    the big things, taking responsibility very seriously and working very
    hard.
VIII. Yalta: Bargain or Betrayal?
  • A final conference of the Big Three had taken place at Yalta in February 1945, where Soviet leader Joseph Stalin pledged that Poland should have a representative government with free elections, as would Bulgaria and Romania. But, Stalin broke those promises.
  • At Yalta, the Soviet Union had agreed to attack Japan three months after the fall of Germany, but by the time the Soviets entered the Pacific war, the U.S. was about to win anyway, and now, it seemed that the U.S.S.R. had entered for the sake of taking spoils.
  • The Soviet Union was also granted control of the Manchurian railroads and received special privileges to Dairen and Port Arthur.
  • Critics of FDR charged that he’d sold China’s Chiang Kai-shek down the river, while supporters claimed that the Soviets could have taken more of China had they wished, and that the Yalta agreements had actually limited the Soviet Union.
IX. The United States and the Soviet Union
  • Confrontation between America and Russia was inevitable
  •  U.S. had waited until1933, to recognize the U.S.S.R.; the U.S. and Britain had delayed to open up a second front during World War II; the U.S. and Britain had frozen the Soviets out of developing nuclear arms; and the U.S. had
    withdrawn its vital lend-lease program from the U.S.S.R. in 1945 and
    spurned Moscow’s plea for a $6 billion reconstructive loan while
    approving a similar $3.75 billion loan to Berlin.
  • Stalin wanted a protective sphere around western Russian, for twice
    earlier in the century Russia had been attacked from that direction,
    and that meant taking nations like Poland under its control.
  • Even though both the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R. were recent newcomers
    to the world stage, they were very advanced and had been isolationist
    before the 20th century, now they found themselves in a political
    stare-down that would turn into the Cold War and last for four and a
    half decades.
X. Shaping the Postwar World
  • However, the U.S. did manage to establish structures that were part of FDR’s open world.
  • At a meeting at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, in 1944, the Western Allies established the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to encourage world trade by regulating the currency exchange rates.
  • The United Nations opened on April 25, 1945.
  • The member nations drew up a charter similar to that of the old League of Nations, formed a Security Council to be headed by five permanent powers (China, U.S.S.R., Britain, France, and U.S.A.) that had total veto powers, and was headquartered in New York City.
  • The Senate overwhelmingly approved the U.N. by a vote of 89 to 2.
  • However, when U.S. delegate Bernard Baruch called in 1946 for a U.N. agency free from the great power veto that could investigate all nuclear facilities and weapons, the U.S.S.R. rejected the proposal, since it didn’t want to give up its veto power and was opposed to “capitalist spies” snooping around in the Soviet Union. The small window of regulating nuclear weapons was lost.
XI. The Problem of Germany
  • The Nuremberg Trials of 1945-46 severely punished 22 top culprits of the Holocaust.
  • America knew that an economically healthy Germany was indispensable
    to the recovery of all of Europe, but Russia, fearing another
    blitzkrieg, wanted huge reparations from Germany.
  • Germany, like Austria, was divided into four occupational zones controlled by the Allied Powers minus China, but as the U.S. began proposing the idea of a united Germany, and as the Western nations prevented Stalin from getting his reparations from their parts of Germany, it became obvious that Germany would remain indefinitely divided.
  • In 1948, when the U.S.S.R. choked off all air and railway access to Berlin, located deep in East Germany, they thought that such an act would starve the Allies out, since Berlin itself was divided into four zones as well.
  • However, the Allies organized the massive Berlin Airlift to feed the people of Berlin, and in May 1949, the Soviets stopped their blockade of Berlin.
XII. The Cold War Congeals
  • When, in 1946, Stalin used his troops to aid a rebel movement in Iran, Truman protested, and the Soviets backed down.
  • Truman soon adopted the “containment policy,” crafted by Soviet specialist George F. Kennan, which stated that firm containment of Soviet expansion would halt Communist power.
  • On March 12, 1947, Truman requested that the containment policy be put into action in what would come to be called the Truman Doctrine: $400 million to help Greece and Turkey from falling into communist power.
  • So basically, the doctrine said that the U.S. would aid any power fighting Communist aggression, an idea later criticized because the U.S. would often give money to dictators “fighting communism.”
  • In Western Europe, France, Italy, and Germany were still in
    terrible shape, so Truman, with the help of Secretary of State George
    C. Marshall, implemented the Marshall Plan, a miraculous recovery
    effort that had Western Europe up and prosperous in no time.
  • This helped in the forming of the European Community (EC).
  • However, a Soviet-sponsored coup that toppled the government of
    Czechoslovakia finally awakened the Congressmen to their senses, and
    they passed the plan.
XIII. America Begins to Rearm
  • The 1947 National Security Act created the Department of Defense, which was housed in the Pentagon and headed by a new cabinet position, the Secretary of Defense, under which served civilian secretaries of the army, navy, and air force.
  • The “Voice of America,” a radio broadcast, began
    beaming in 1948, while Congress resurrected the military draft
    (Selective Service System), which redefined many young people’s
    career choices and persuaded them to go to college.
  • In response, the U.S.S.R. formed the Warsaw Pact, its own alliance system.
  • NATO’s membership grew to fourteen with the 1952 admissions
    of Greece and Turkey, and then to 15 when West Germany joined in 1955.
XIV. Reconstruction and Revolution in Asia
  • General Douglas MacArthur headed reconstruction in Japan and tried
    the top Japanese war criminals. He dictated a constitution that was
    adopted in 1946, and democratized Japan.
  • Then, in September of 1949, Truman announced that the Soviets had
    exploded their first atomic bomb—three years before experts
    thought it was possible, thus eliminating the U.S. monopoly on nuclear
    weapons.
  • The U.S. exploded the hydrogen bomb in 1952, and the Soviets
    followed suit a year later; thus began the dangerous arms race of the
    Cold War.
XV. Ferreting Out Alleged Communists
  • An anti-red chase was in full force in the U.S. with the formation
    of the Loyalty Review Board, which investigated more than 3 million
    federal employees.
  • The attorney general also drew up a list of 90 organizations that
    were potentially not loyal to the U.S., and none was given the
    opportunity to defend itself.
  • They were convicted, sent to prison, and their conviction was upheld by the 1951 case Dennis v. United States.
  • The House of Representatives had, in 1938 established the Committee on Un-American Activities (“HUAC”) to investigate “subversion,” and in 1948, committee member Richard M. Nixon prosecuted Alger Hiss.
  • In February 1950, Joseph R. McCarthy burst upon the scene, charging
    that there were scores of unknown communists in the State Department.
  • He couldn’t prove it, and many American began to fear that
    this red chase was going too far; after all, how could there be freedom
    of speech if saying communist ideas got one arrested?
  • The Soviet success of developing nuclear bombs so easily was probably due to spies, and in 1951, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were brought to trial, convicted, and executed of selling nuclear secrets to the Russians.
  • Their sensational trial, electrocution, and sympathy for their two children began to sober America zeal in red hunting.
XVI. Democratic Divisions in 1948
  • Republicans won control of the House in 1946 and then nominated
    Thomas E. Dewey to the 1948 ticket, while Democrats were forced to
    choose Truman again when war-hero Dwight D. Eisenhower refused to be
    chosen.
  • Truman’s nomination split the Democratic Party, as Southern
    Democrats (“Dixiecrats”) nominated Governor J. Strom
    Thurmond of South Carolina on a State’s Rights Party ticket.
  • Truman received critical support from farmers, workers, and blacks.
  • Truman then called for a new program called “Point Four,” which called for financial support of poor, underdeveloped lands in hopes of keeping underprivileged peoples from turning communist.
  • At home, Truman outlined a sweeping “Fair Deal” program, which called for improved housing, full employment, a higher minimum wage, better farm price supports, a new Tennessee Valley Authority, and an extension of Social Security.
  • However, the only successes came in raising the minimum wage,
    providing for public housing in the Housing Act of 1949, and extending
    old-age insurance to more beneficiaries with the Social Security Act of
    1950.
XVII. The Korean Volcano Erupts (1950)
  • When Russian and American forces withdrew from Korea, they had left
    the place full of weapons and with rival regimes (communist North and
    democratic South).
  • Then, on June 25, 1950, North Korean forces suddenly invaded South
    Korean, taking the South Koreans by surprise and pushing them
    dangerously south toward Pusan.
  • Truman sprang to action, remembering that the League of Nations had
    failed from inactivity, and ordered U.S. military spending to be
    quadrupled, as desired by the National Security Council Memorandum
    Number 68, or NSC-68.
  • Truman also used a Soviet absence from the U.N. to label North
    Korea as an aggressor and send U.N. troops to fight against the
    aggressors.
  • He also ordered General MacArthur’s Japan-based troops to Korea.
XVIII. The Military Seesaw in Korea
  • General MacArthur landed a brilliant invasion behind enemy forces
    at Inchon on September 15, 1950, and drove the North Koreans back
    across the 38th parallel, towards China and the Yalu River.
  • An overconfident MacArthur boasted that he’d “have the
    boys home by Christmas,” but in November 1950, Chinese
    “volunteers” flooded across the border and pushed the South
    Koreans back to the 38th parallel.
  • MacArthur, humiliated, wanted to blockade China and bomb Manchuria,
    but Truman didn’t want to enlarge the war beyond necessity, but
    when the angry general began to publicly criticize President Truman and
    spoke of using atomic weapons, Harry had no choice but to remove him
    from command on grounds of insubordination.
  • MacArthur returned to cheers while Truman was scorned as a
    “pig,” an “imbecile,” an appeaser to communist
    Russia and China, and a “Judas.”
  • In July 1951, truce discussions began but immediately snagged over the issue of prisoner exchange.
  • Talks dragged on for two more years as men continued to die.



Chapter 37 Outline
I. Affluence and Its Anxieties
·      The economy really sprouted during the 50s, and the invention of
the transistor exploded the electronics field, especially in computers,
helping such companies as International Business Machines (IBM) expand
and prosper.
·      Aerospace industries progressed, as the Boeing company made the
first passenger-jet airplane (adapted from the superbombers of the
Strategic Air Command), the 707.
·      In 1956, “white-collar” workers outnumbered “blue
collar” workers for the first time, meaning that the industrial
era was passing on.
·      As this occurred, labor unions peaked in 1954 then started a steady decline.7
·      Women appeared more and more in the workplace, despite the
stereotypical role of women as housewives that was being portrayed on
TV shows such as “Ozzie and Harriet” and “Leave It to
Beaver.”
·      More than 40 million new jobs were created.
·      Women’s expansion into the workplace shocked some, but really
wasn’t surprising if one observed the trends in history, and now,
they were both housewives and workers.
·      Betty Friedan’s 1963 book The Feminine Mystique was a
best-seller and a classic of modern feminine protest literature.
She’s the godmother of the feminist movement.
II. Consumer Culture in the Fifties
·      The fifties saw the first Diner’s Club cards, the opening of
McDonald’s, the debut of Disneyland, and an explosion in the
number of television stations in the country.
·      Advertisers used television to sell products while
“televangelists” like Billy Graham, Oral Roberts, and
Fulton J. Sheen used TV to preach the gospel and encourage religion.
·      Sports shifted west, as the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants moved to Los Angeles and San Francisco, respectively, in 1958.
·      Elvis Presley, a white singer of the new “rock and
roll” who made girls swoon with his fleshy face, pointing lips,
and antic, sexually suggestive gyrations, that redefined popular music.
·      Elvis died from drugs in 1977, at age 42.
·      Traditionalists were shocked by Elvis’s shockingly open
sexuality, and Marilyn Monroe (in her Playboy magazine spread)
continued in the redefinition of the new sensuous sexuality.
·      Critics, such as David Riesman in The Lonely Crowd, William H.
Whyte, Jr. in The Organization Man, and Sloan Wilson in The Man in the
Gray Flannel Suit, lamented this new consumerist style.
·      Harvard economist John Kenneth Galbraith questioned the relation between private wealth and public good in The Affluent Society.
·      Daniel Bell found further such paradoxes, as did C. Wright Mills.
III. The Advent of Eisenhower
·      In 1952, the Democrats chose Adlai E. Stevenson, the witty governor
of Illinois, while Republicans rejected isolationist Robert A. Taft and
instead chose World War II hero Dwight D. Eisenhower to run for
president and anticommunist Richard M. Nixon to be his running mate.
·      Grandfatherly Eisenhower was a war hero and liked by everyone, so
he left the rough part of campaigning to Nixon, who attacked Stevenson
as soft against communists, corrupt, and weak in the Korean situation.
·      Nixon then almost got caught with a secretly financed “slush
fund,” but to save his political career, he delivered his famous
and touching “Checkers Speech.” In it, he denied wrongdoing
and spoke of his family and specifically, his daughter’s cute
little cocker spaniel, Checkers. He was forgiven in the public arena
and stayed on as V.P.
·      The “Checkers speech” showed the awesome power of
television, since Nixon had pleaded on national TV, and even later,
“Ike,” as Eisenhower was called, agreed to go into studio
and answer some brief “questions,” which were later spliced
in and edited to make it look like Eisenhower had answered questions
from a live audience, when in fact he hadn’t.
·      This showed the power that TV would have in the upcoming decades,
allowing lone wolves to appeal directly to the American people instead
of being influenced by party machines or leaders.
·      Ike won easily (442 to 89), and true to his campaign promise, he
flew to Korea to help move along peace negotiations, yet failed. But
seven months later, after Ike threatened to use nuclear weapons, an
armistice was finally signed (but was later violated often).
·      In Korea, 54,000 Americans had died, and tens of billions of
dollars had been wasted in the effort, but Americans took a little
comfort in knowing that communism had been “contained.”
·      Eisenhower had been an excellent commander and leader who was able
to make cooperation possible between anyone, so he seemed to be a
perfect leader for Americans weary of two decades of depression, war,
and nuclear standoff.
·      He served that aspect of his job well, but he could have used his popularity to champion civil rights more than he actually did.
IV. The Rise and Fall of Joseph McCarthy
·      In February 1950, Joseph R. McCarthy burst upon the scene, charging
that there were scores of unknown communists in the State Department.
·      He couldn’t prove it, and many American began to fear that
this red chase was going too far; after all, how could there be freedom
of speech if saying communist ideas got one arrested?
·      The success of brutal anticommunist “crusader” Joseph
R. McCarthy was quite alarming, for after he had sprung onto the
national scene by charging that Secretary of State Dean Acheson was
knowingly employing 205 Communist Party members (a claim he never
proved, not even for one person), he ruthlessly sought to prosecute and
persecute suspected communists, often targeting innocent people and
destroying families and lives.
·      Eisenhower privately loathed McCarthy, but the president did little
to stop the anti-red, since it appeared that most Americans supported
his actions. But Ike’s zeal led him to purge important Asian
experts in the State Department, men who could have advised a better
course of action in Vietnam.
·      He even denounced General George Marshall, former army chief of staff during World War II.
·      Finally, in 1954, when he attacked the army, he’d gone too
far and was exposed for the liar and drunk that he was; three years
later, he died unwept and unsung.
V. Desegregating American Society
·      Blacks in the South were bound by the severe Jim Crow laws that
segregated every aspect of society, from schools to restrooms to
restaurants and beyond.
·      Only about 20% of the eligible blacks could vote, due to
intimidation, discrimination, poll taxes, and other schemes meant to
keep black suffrage down.
·      Where the law proved sufficient to enforce such oppression,
vigilante justice in the form of lynchings did the job, and the white
murderers were rarely caught and convicted.
·      However, with organizations such as the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People, and their rulings such as the 1950
case of Sweatt v. Painter, where the Supreme Court ruled that separate
professional schools for blacks failed to meet the test of equality,
such protestors as Rosa Parks, who in December 1955, refused to give up
a bus seat in the “whites only” section, and pacifist
leaders like Martin Luther King, Jr., who believed in peaceful methods
of civil rights protests, blacks were making their suffering and
discrimination known to the public.
VI. Seeds of the Civil Rights Revolution
·      After he heard about the 1946 lynchings of black soldiers seeking
rights for which they fought overseas, Truman immediately sought to
improve black rights by desegregating the armed forces, but Eisenhower
failed to continue this trend by failing to support laws.
·      Only the judicial branch was left to improve black civil rights.
·      Earl Warren, appointed Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, shocked
his conservative backers by actively assailing black injustice and
ruling in favor of African-Americans.
·      The 1954 landmark case of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, reversed the previous 1896 ruling of Plessy v. Ferguson
when the Brown case said that “separate but equal”
facilities were inherently unequal. Under the Brown case, schools were
ordered integrated.
·      However, while the Border States usually obeyed this new ruling,
states in the Deep South did everything they could to delay it and
disobey it, diverting funds to private schools, signing a
“Declaration of Constitutional Principles” that promised
not to desegregate, and physically preventing blacks to integrate.
·      Ten years after the ruling, fewer than 2% of eligible black students sat in the same classrooms as whites.
·      Real integration of schools in the Deep South occurred around 1970.
VII. Eisenhower Republicanism at Home
·      Eisenhower came into the White House pledging a policy of
“dynamic conservatism,” which stated that he would be
liberal with people, but conservative with their money.
·      Ike decreased government spending by decreasing military spending,
trying to transfer control of offshore oil fields to the states, and
trying to curb the TVA by setting up a private company to take its
place.
·      His secretary of health, education, and welfare condemned free distribution of the Salk anti-polio vaccine as being socialist.
·      Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson tackled agriculture
issues, but despite the government’s purchase of surplus grain
which it stored in giant silos costing Americans $2 million a day,
farmers didn’t see prosperity.
·      Eisenhower also cracked down on illegal Mexican immigration that
cut down on the success of the bracero program, by rounding up 1
million Mexicans and returning them to their native country in 1954.
·      With Indians, though, Ike proposed ending the lenient FDR-style
treatment toward Indians and reverting to a Dawes Severalty Act-style
policy toward Native Americans. But due to protest and resistance, this
was disbanded.
·      However, Eisenhower kept many of the New Deal programs, since some,
like Social Security and unemployment insurance, simply had to stay in
the public’s mind.
·      However, he did do some of the New Deal programs better, such as
his backing of the Interstate Highway Act, which built 42,000 miles of
interstate freeways.
·      Still, Eisenhower only balanced the budget three times in his eight
years of office, and in 1959, he incurred the biggest peacetime deficit
in U.S. history up to that point.
·      Still, critics said that he was economically timid, blaming the president for the sharp economic downturn of 1957-58.
·      Also, the AF of L merged with the CIO to end 20 years of bitter division in labor unions.
·      When it came to civil rights, Eisenhower had a lukewarm record at best, and was slow to move.
·      Eisenhower refused to issue a statement acknowledging the Supreme
Court’s ruling on integration, and he even privately complained
about this new end to segregation, but in September 1957, when Orval
Faubus, the governor of Arkansas, mobilized the National Guard to
prevent nine black students from enrolling in Little Rock’s
Central High School, Ike sent federal troops to escort the children to
their classes.
·      That year, Congress passed the first Civil Rights Act since the
Reconstruction days, an act that set up a permanent Civil Rights
Commission to investigate violations of civil rights and authorized
federal injunctions to protect voting rights.
·      Meanwhile, Martin Luther King, Jr. formed the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, which aimed to mobilize the vast power of black
churches on behalf of black rights—a shrewd strategy, since
churches were a huge source of leadership in the black community.
·      On February 1, 1960, four black college freshmen launched a
“sit-in” movement in Greensboro, North Carolina, demanding
service at a whites-only Woolworth’s lunch counter, thus sparking
the sit-in movement.
·      In April 1960, southern black students formed the Student
Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, or SNCC, to give more focus and
force to their civil rights efforts.
VIII. A New Look in Foreign Policy
·      Secretary of State John Foster Dulles stated that the policy of
containment was not enough and that the U.S. was going to push back
communism and liberate the peoples under it. This became known as
“rollback.” All-the-while he advocated toning down defense
spending by building a fleet of superbombers called Strategic Air
Command, which could drop massive nuclear bombs in any retaliation.
·      Eisenhower had a “new look” on a policy of Massive Relatiation.
Massive Reltaliation was the building up of our forces in the sky to
scare the enemys. We created the Strategic Air Command (SAC). This was
an airfleet of superbombers equipped with city-flattening nuclear
bombs. These fearsome weapons would inflict “Massive Retaliation” on
the enemy, and were also a great bang for the buck.
·      Ike tried to thaw the Cold War by appealing for peace to new Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev at the 1955 Geneva Conference, but the Soviet
leader rejected such proposals, along with one for “open
skies.”
·      However, hypocritically, when the Hungarians revolted against the
U.S.S.R. and appealed to the U.S. for help, America did nothing,
earning the scorn of bitter freedom fighters.
IX. The Vietnam Nightmare
·      In Vietnam, revolutionary Ho Chi Minh had tried to encourage
Woodrow Wilson to help the Vietnamese against the French and gained
some support from Wilson, but as Ho became increasingly communist, the
U.S. began to oppose him.
·      In March 1954, when the French became trapped at Dienbienphu,
Eisenhower’s aides wanted to bomb the Viet Minh guerilla forces,
but Ike held back, fearing plunging the U.S. into another Asian war so
soon after Korea. After the Vietnamese won at Dienbienphu, Vietnam was
split at the 17th parallel, supposedly temporarily.
·      Ho Chi Minh was supposed to allow free elections, but soon, Vietnam
became clearly split between a communist north and a pro-Western south.
·      Dienbienphu marks the start of American interest in Vietnam.
·      Secretary Dulles created the Southeast Asian Treaty Organization (SEATO) to emulate NATO, but this provided little help.
X. Cold War Crises in Europe and the Middle East
·      In 1955, the USSR formed the Warsaw Pact to counteract NATO, but
the Cold War did seem to be thawing a bit, as Eisenhower pressed for
reduction of arms, and the Soviets were surprisingly cooperative, and
Khrushchev publicly denounced Stalin’s brutality.
·      However, in 1956, when the Hungarians revolted against the USSR, the Soviets crushed them with brutality and massive bloodshed.
·      The U.S. did change some of its immigration laws to let 30,000 Hungarians into America as immigrants.
·      In 1953, to protect oil supplies in the Middle East, the CIA
engineered a coup in Iran that installed the youthful shah Mohammed
Reza Pahlevi, as ruler of the nation, protecting the oil for the time
being, but earning the wrath of Arabs that would be repaid in the 70s.
·      The Suez crisis was far messier: President Gamal Abdel Nasser, of
Egypt, needed money to build a dam in the upper Nile and flirted openly
with the Soviet side as well as the U.S. and Britain, and upon seeing
this blatant communist association, Secretary of State Dulles
dramatically withdrew his offer, thus forcing Nasser to nationalize the
dam.
·      Late in October 1956, Britain, France, and Israel suddenly attacked
Egypt, thinking that the U.S. would supply them with needed oil, as had
been the case in WWII, but Eisenhower did not, and the attackers had to
withdraw.
·      The Suez crisis marked the last time the U.S. could brandish its “oil weapon.”
·      In 1960, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, Iran, and Venezuela joined to
form the cartel Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC.
XI. Round Two for “Ike”
·      In 1956, Eisenhower again ran against Stevenson and won easily by a landslide.
·      The GOP called itself the “party of peace” while the
Democrats assaulted Ike’s health, since he had had a heart attack
in 1955 and a major abdominal operation in ’56.
·      However, the Democrats did win the House and Senate.
·      After Secretary of State Dulles died of cancer in 1959 and
presidential assistant Sherman Adams was forced to leave under a cloud
of scandal due to bribery charges, Eisenhower, without his two most
trusted and most helpful aides, was forced to govern more and golf less.
·      A drastic labor-reform bill in 1959 grew from recurrent strikes in critical industries.
·      Teamster chief “Dave” Beck was sent to prison for
embezzlement, and his successor, James R. Hoffa’s appointment got
the Teamsters expelled out of the AF of L-CIO.
·      Hoffa was later jailed for jury tampering and then disappeared in
prison, allegedly murdered by some gangsters that he had crossed.
·      The 1959 Landrum-Griffin Act was designed to bring labor leaders to book for financial shenanigans and prevent bullying tactics.
·      Anti-laborites forced into the bill bans against “secondary boycotts” and certain types of picketing.
·      A “space-race” began in 1957.
·      On October 4, 1957, the Russians launched Sputnik I into space, and a month later, they sent Sputnik II into orbit as well, thus totally demoralizing Americans, because this seemed to prove communist superiority in the sciences at least.
·      Plus, the Soviets might fire missiles at the U.S. from space.
·      Critics charged that Truman had not spent enough money on missile programs while America had used its science for other things, like television.
·      Four months after Sputnik I, the U.S. sent its own satellite (weighing only 2.5 lbs) into space, but the apparent U.S. lack of technology sent concerns over U.S. education, since American children seemed to be learning less advanced information than Soviet kids.
XII. The Continuing Cold War
·      Humanity-minded scientists called for an end to atmospheric nuclear testing, lest future generations be deformed and mutated.
·      Beginning October 1958, Washington did halt “dirty” testing, as did the U.S.S.R., but attempts to regularize such suspensions were unsuccessful.
·      However, in 1959, Khrushchev was invited by Ike to America for talks, and when he arrived in New York, he immediately spoke of disarmament, but gave no means of how to do it.
·      Later, at Camp David, talks did show upward signs, as the Soviet premier said that his ultimatum for the evacuation of Berlin would be extended indefinitely.
·      However, at the Paris conference, Khrushchev came in angry that the U.S. had flown a U-2 spy plane over Soviet territory (in this U-2 incident, the plane had been shot down and Eisenhower embarrassingly took personal responsibility), and tensions immediately tightened again.
XIII. Cuba’s Castroism Spells Communism
·      Latin American nations resented the United States’ giving billions of dollars to Europe compared to millions to Latin America, as well as the U.S.’s constant intervention (Guatemala, 1954), as well as its support of cold dictators who claimed to be fighting communism.
·      In 1959, in Cuba, Fidel Castro overthrew U.S.-supported Fulgencio Batista, promptly denounced the Yankee imperialists, and began to take U.S. properties for a land-distribution program. When the U.S. cut off heavy U.S. imports of Cuban sugar, Castro confiscated more American property.
·      In 1961, America broke diplomatic relations with Cuba.
·      Khrushchev threatened to launch missiles at the U.S. if it attacked Cuba; meanwhile, America induced the Organization of American States to condemn communism in the Americas.
·      Finally, Eisenhower proposed a “Marshall Plan” for Latin America, which gave $500 million to the area, but many Latin Americans felt that it was too little, too late.
XIV. Kennedy Challenges Nixon for the Presidency
·      The Republicans chose Richard Nixon, gifted party leader to some, ruthless opportunist to others, in 1960 with Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. as his running mate; while John F. Kennedy surprisingly won for the Democrats and had Lyndon B. Johnson as his running mate.
·      Kennedy was attacked because he was a Catholic presidential candidate, but defended himself and encouraged Catholics to vote for him. As it turned out, if he lost votes from the South due to his religion, he got them back from the North due to the staunch Catholics there.
·      In four nationally televised debates, JFK held his own and looked more charismatic, perhaps helping him to win the election by a comfortable margin, becoming the youngest president elected (TR was younger after McKinley was assassinated).
XV. An Old General Fades Away
·      Eisenhower had his critics, but he was appreciated more and more for ending one war and keeping the U.S. out of others.
·      Even though the 1951-passed 22nd Amendment had limited him to two terms as president, Ike displayed more vigor and controlled Congress during his second term than his first.
·      In 1959, Alaska and Hawaii became the 49th and 50th states to join the Union.
·      Perhaps Eisenhower’s greatest weakness was his ignorance of social problems of the time, preferring to smile them away rather than deal with them, even though he was no bigot.
XVI. The Life of the Mind in Postwar America
·      Ernest Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea and John Steinbeck’s East of Eden and Travels with Charlie showed that prewar writers could still be successful, but new writers, who, except for Norman Mailer’s The Naked and the Dead and James Jones’s From Here to Eternity, spurned realism, were successful as well.
·      Joseph Heller’s Catch-22 and Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.’s Slaughter-House Five crackled with fantastic and psychedelic prose, satirizing the suffering of the war.
·      Authors and books that explored problems created by the new
mobility and affluence of American life: John Updike’s Rabbit, Run and Couples; John Cheever’s The Wapshot Chronicle and The Wapshot Scandal; Louis Auchincloss’s books, and Gore Vidal’s Myra Breckinridge.
·      The poetry of Ezra Pound, Wallace Stevens, William Carlos Williams, Theodore Roethke, Robert Lowell (For the Union Dead), Sylvia Plath (Ariel and The Bell-Jar), Anne Sexton, and John Berryman reflected the twisted emotions of the war, but some poets were troubled in their own minds as well, often committing suicide or living miserable lives.
·      Tennessee Williams’s A Streetcar Named Desire and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof were two plays that searched for American values, as were
Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman and The Crucible.
·      Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun portrayed African-American life while Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? revealed the underside of middle class life.
·      Books by black authors such as Richard Wright (Black Boy), Ralph Ellison (Invisible Man), and James Baldwin made best-seller’s lists; Black playwrights like LeRoi Jones made powerful plays (The Dutchman).
·      The South had literary artists like William Faulkner (The Sound and the Fury, Light in August), Walker Percy, and Eudora Welty.
·      Jewish authors also had famous books, such as J.D. Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye.
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1 comment:

  1. Good set of notes! We'll talk about homework tonight.

    ReplyDelete