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AP U.S. History 1.1 Period 7: 1890–1945. The Clayton Antitrust Act marked a new period in American labor relations because it...what?
AP U.S. History 1.4 Period 7: 1890-1945. The sentiment expressed in the cartoon above is most similar to the rhetoric from which of the follow...
AP U.S. History 2.5 Period 7: 1890-1945. The "capacity of industry" that President Truman refers to coincided with and was enabled by what demograp...
AP U.S. History 1.4 Period 7: 1890-1945 229 Views
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Description:
AP U.S. History 1.4 Period 7: 1890-1945. The sentiment expressed in the cartoon above is most similar to the rhetoric from which of the following decades?
Transcript
- 00:00
[ musical flourish ]
- 00:03
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by the Red Scare,
- 00:07
a not-so-practical joke to play on a bull.
- 00:10
The sentiment expressed in the cartoon above is most similar
- 00:13
to the rhetoric from which of the following decades?
Full Transcript
- 00:16
And here are your potential answers.
- 00:17
[ growl ]
- 00:20
All right, well first of all let's figure out what exactly is going on
- 00:24
in this cartoon. We see a man with the label "European anarchy"
- 00:27
sneaking up behind the Statue of Liberty holding a bomb.
- 00:30
We also see the caption "Come unto me,
- 00:33
ye opprest." And the year is 1919.
- 00:36
So that means we're dealing with post-World War I,
- 00:38
right around the time the Russian revolutionaries formed
- 00:41
their first communist government.
- 00:43
Well, U.S. politicians kind of freaked out about the whole communist thing,
- 00:46
since they worried the same sort of labor-driven revolt
- 00:49
could happen here at home.
- 00:50
As a result, the first Red Scare was born,
- 00:53
leading to the restriction of immigration from countries
- 00:56
suspected of communist sympathies
- 00:58
and of suppressing civil liberties.
- 01:00
Now let's figure out which decade in our answers shared
- 01:03
a similar sentiment. Was this sentiment most similar
- 01:06
to rhetoric from the A - 1930s?
- 01:08
Well, remember the stock market crash in 1929?
- 01:11
Many people read that as the failure of capitalism.
- 01:14
So the 1930s actually saw a growing tolerance
- 01:17
for alternative economic ideas. That eliminates A.
- 01:20
Was the rhetoric similar to the C -
- 01:22
1960s? Well, by the 1960s, we were
- 01:25
well into the Cold War, and the nation's focus was more on
- 01:29
Cuba, Vietnam, and other external threats, rather than
- 01:32
communists here at home. Same goes for the 1970s,
- 01:35
so that knocks out C and D. Which means that this
- 01:37
anti-communist rhetoric most lines up with
- 01:40
B - the 1950s. If you thought the first Red Scare
- 01:43
was bad, the second Red Scare in the 50s was even worse.
- 01:47
Senator Joseph McCarthy went after everyone with
- 01:50
a dissenting opinion in Congress, and the rest of the U.S. government,
- 01:53
using the communist label to ruin careers and remove
- 01:57
threats to his own personal legacy.
- 01:59
So the correct answer is B. Many of McCarthy's accusations
- 02:02
ended up being untrue, but you know what they say,
- 02:05
"Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice,
- 02:08
you're a communist witch."
- 02:10
[ witch laugh ]
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