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The 70s, 80s, 90s, and Today… Mr. Pagliaro Seymour High School @PagsAPUSH Hawks, Doves, the Silent Majority, and the End of the War Doves preferred withdrawal from Vietnam Massive protest Immediate withdrawal Sen. William Fulbright (Dem.- Ark.) The Arrogance of Power (1966) – critique of war ▪ Stated war wasn’t necessary for containment ▪ Promoted neutrality; isolationism Hawks: Supported war in Vietnam Believed withdrawal = surrender Silent Majority: Named by Nixon America that quietly supported war policies Justified support of So. Vietnam Easter Offensive – No. Vietnam failure Operation Linebacker 1 & 2: Heavy bombings of No. Vietnam, 1972 Paris Accords, 1973 Emerged after secret negotiations btw. Security Advisor, Henry Kissinger & No. Vietnamese Withdrawal of troops Freeing of American 500+ P.O.W.s Final Americans left Saigon, April 30, 1975 – Operation Frequent Wind The fall of Saigon Economic effects: US couldn’t afford Great Society & Vietnam War War costs + Social Programs = high inflation 60s-70s ▪ Nixon Shock attempted to fight inflation Foreign Policy effects: Public skepticism of American international involvement War Powers Act (1973) – ▪ President must inform Congress within 48 hours IF… ▪ Military sent to hostile area w/o declaring war China, the Soviet Union, SALT talks Existence of the Cold War Tension among US & USSR Berlin airlift, Cuban Missile Crisis, Berlin Wall US had no diplomatic relationship w/ China Kissinger convinced Nixon to create flexible foreign policy Détente called for relaxed Cold War tensions 1971-Nixon announced visit to China “…to normalize relations between the countries.” Visited Beijing, Feb. 1972 Formalized relations w/ PRC US maintained relationship w/ RoC until 1979 Nixon = 1st President in Moscow Visit led to reduced tensions Agreements included SALT talks, economic initiatives Strategic Arms Limitation Talks SALT I treaty between USSR and USA: ▪ Signed by President Gerald Ford ▪ Limited # of ICBMs ▪ Limited # of nuclear armed subs Connecting Federal, State, & Local governments, CReeP, Watergate Great Society increased federal influence & spending Nixon wanted to REDUCE size of federal gov’t Distribute federal power to state/local governments Revenue sharing State/municipalities chose how to spend federal funding Certain limitations Increased state autonomy lost in New Deal Examples Legacy of Parks, 1971 Education $ NIXON - REPUBLICANS Good economy Foreign relations Desegregation of all schools w/o busing MCGOVERN - DEMOCRATS Antiwar policies Guaranteed minimum income Nixon kept tabs on rivals & enemies Taped conversations Committee to Re-Elect the President (CRP or creep) June 17, 1972 5 men arrested breaking into HQ of DNC @ Watergate Hotel ▪ Phone tapping, breaking-and-entering Convicted January 1973 Nixon won 520-17 w/ 60.7% of vote Watergate tapes Turned over during impeachment trials Forced resignation of Nixon-8/8/74 Sept. 8, 1974 Bicentennial, Election of ‘76, Frostbelt to Sunbelt, the 70s economy, Camp David Accords, Iran, Election of 1980 OpSail – Tall Ship “parades” Opening of Nat’l Air & Space Museum School House Rock – History Rock specials TV Specials – In Celebration of US (CBS), 14 hour coverage hosted by Walter Cronkite The Glorious Fourth (NBC), 10 hour coverage The Great American Birthday Party (ABC), hosted by Harry Reasoner Happy Birthday, America (NBC), hosted by Paul Anka Bob Hope's Bicentennial Star-Spangled Spectacular (NBC) Special commemorative coins Gerald Ford – Republican Electoral Votes – 240 States Carried – 27 Popular Vote – 48% Jimmy Carter - Democrat Electoral Votes – 297 States Carried – 23 Popular Vote – 50.1 Mid-70s to 90s– fastest growing States = south of 37°N Movement of jobs Tax incentives Past 25 years – large increase in both Latinos = 78% since 2000 Latinos=33% TX, CA, AZ, 40% NM Latino efforts for educational/economic access Cesar Chavez Reies Lopez Tijerina Rodolfo Gonzalez ¡Si, se puede! Biggest domestic concern – INFLATION US – increasing inflation over 70s ▪ Slow economic growth ▪ Led to unemployment Rising inflation + Rising unemployment= STAGFLATION Caused by Nixon price/ wage controls, OPEC embargo of US (due to Yom Kippur war) Increased inflation Increased unemployment Increased government spending Increased gas prices due to: Arab oil embargo (1973) Iranian Revolution (1979) Increased interest rates 1973 Arab Oil Embargo 1979 Iranian Oil Crisis Carter’s “Crisis of Confidence Speech” White House solar panels Detroit improved fuel economy Smaller engines Electronic fuel injection Vietnam spending Rising energy costs Federal budget deficits Healthcare costs Foreign policy based on human rights Made it an international issue Camp David Accords Leaders of Israel & Egypt met @ Camp David, MD 12 day negotiations ▪ Peace agreement over Sinai region Signed 1979 – Reduction in #s and use of MIRVs Never ratified Soviets invaded Afghanistan, 1979 Jan. 78-Feb. 79-Shah overthrown Religious leaders take controlAyatollah US provided healthcare to Shah US ally = Israel Iranian revolutionaries overthrow US embassy Take 52 hostages ▪ Nov. 4, 1979 to Jan. 20, 1981 Carter vs. Ronald Reagan Issues – ▪ Iranian Hostages ▪ Weak economy/high inflation (double digits) ▪ Hostility towards big government ▪ Call for conservative Supreme Court Republicans successfully defeated the Democrat Coalition on… Social issues such as – ▪ Affirmative action ▪ Women’s rights ▪ Sexual freedom ▪ Blue collar workers moved towards Republicans The New Right – religious right, military, blue collar Reagan promised to increase military; cut taxes Reagan – 489 Carter – 44 Reagan – 50.7% Carter – 41% Republicans controlled Senate after 1980 Iran, Reaganomics, USSR Summits, Grenada, Iran-Contras Supply-side economic policy goals Reduce tax rates for businesses/wealthy Reduce corporate tax rates Encourage private investment Limit Federal regulation of business “Trickle down” Theory 1. 2. 3. 4. Reduce Government spending. Reduce Income Tax and Capital Gains Tax. Reduce Government regulation. Control the money supply to reduce inflation. Airlines Railroads Trucking Telephones Natural gas Oil/Energy Banking Reduced funding of Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 1981 – Reagan fires 11,500, striking FAA air traffic controllers 1981 – Federal Taxes cut 5% Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 (Kemp-Roth Tax Cut) 1982 – cut 10% Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 1983 – cut 10% Government social spending reduced: Education aid Urban housing programs Arts Reagan’s defense budget increased $13 billion 1981-83 Proposed Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) “Star Wars” Fighting communism or American Imperialism? President of the United States General Secretary or Premier of the Soviet Union Date Site November 19–21, 1985 Geneva, Switzerland Ronald Reagan Mikhail Gorbachev October 10–12, 1986 Reykjavík,Iceland Ronald Reagan Mikhail Gorbachev December 7–10, 1987 Washington, D.C., United States Ronald Reagan Mikhail Gorbachev May 29–June 1, 1988 Moscow, Soviet Union Ronald Reagan Mikhail Gorbachev December 7, 1988 New York City, United States Ronald Reagan Mikhail Gorbachev Shipment of weapons to anti-Ayatollah Iranian Group Payments siphoned to Nicaraguan “Contras” Attempt to overthrow communist government ▪ Once public: Nicaragua sued US at “World Court” Scapegoat: Lt. Oliver North Acquitted because plea deal testimony wrongly used in Congressional hearings The Teflon President End of the Cold War, Desert Storm, LA Riots, Free Trade, The E-Boom & Bust 1990 – Iraq invaded Kuwait UN Security council voted economic sanctions US & Coalition forces to Kuwait – Desert Shield US Military to Saudi Arabia 1991-Jan. 15-Feb. 28-Active War Iraq = 40,000 casualties USA = 150 lives lost Gulf War Syndrome 1991 – 4 white LAPD taped beating motorist, Rodney King April 1992 – Acquittal of officers Riots, looting, arson Cost $1 Billion – 53 dead – 3600 fires War on Drugs HIV/Aids Bush – 37.5% Perot – 18.9% Clinton – 43% NAFTA – North American Free Trade Agreement North American economic bloc US Joined Dec. 8, 1993 Impact: Mexican Factories: increased 15.5% since 1994 US Jobs Lost: 879k by 2008 – 78% = manufacturing No tariffs between members Provided frameworks for international trade agreements Replaced Post-WWII General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade US joined in 1995 International Mergers Dot-Com Trades 0n NASDAQ Nov. 2008 –Election of President Obama Largest Voter turnout ever - >120,000,000 votes 1970s – Present –Migration to Sunbelt South & West largest growing areas of nation ▪ Growing in Latino & Asian population regionally & nationally Social Security Larger aging population = threat to system