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AP U.S. History 3.3 Period 9: 1980-Present. The pattern depicted on the graph from 1980 to 1988 best serves as evidence to which of the following?
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AP U.S. History 1.5 Period 9: 1980-Present 197 Views
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AP U.S. History 1.5 Period 9: 1980-Present. The domestic changes that Nojeim describes occurred alongside...what?
Transcript
- 00:00
[ musical flourish ]
- 00:03
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by the PATRIOT Act,
- 00:06
Patrick Henry's one-man show.
- 00:08
Ba-dum-bum.
- 00:09
Here's the excerpt.
Full Transcript
- 00:10
[ mumbles ]
- 00:14
[ mumbling continues ]
- 00:19
All right, and the question:
- 00:20
The domestic changes that Nojeim describes occurred alongside... what?
- 00:25
And here are your potential answers.
- 00:26
[ mumbles ]
- 00:30
All right, what does the question mean by
- 00:32
"domestic changes"?
- 00:33
No, not deciding to fire your butler.
- 00:36
In the excerpt, the author refers
- 00:37
to "new anti-terrorism measures" that
- 00:40
"fit into three broad themes:
- 00:42
secrecy, erosion of checks and balances,
- 00:46
and circumventing long-standing personal privacy protections."
- 00:50
Say that three times fast.
- 00:52
All right, those measures collectively were
- 00:54
policies in the PATRIOT Act,
- 00:56
passed by Congress in October 2001 following the attacks
- 00:59
of September 11th.
- 01:00
Let's check out the answers and see what else happened
- 01:02
around the same time this law came into effect.
- 01:05
Did these domestic changes occur alongside B -
- 01:08
economic policies that sought to make the world more interconnected?
- 01:12
Well, hmm. After September 11th, the U.S. made little effort to
- 01:15
increase economic interconnectivity, since
- 01:17
things were a little dicey on the "let's all be friends" front.
- 01:20
So it's not B.
- 01:22
Was the PATRIOT Act accompanied by C -
- 01:24
legislative reforms that promoted immigration from the Middle East?
- 01:28
Well, actually, xenophobia and anti-Islamic sentiment
- 01:32
were at an all-time high,
- 01:33
so this doesn't really make sense, either.
- 01:35
Could these domestic policy changes have been followed by D -
- 01:38
immediate public backlash against the new measures?
- 01:41
Well, quite the opposite, really.
- 01:43
Many Americans reeling from the terrorist attacks
- 01:46
enthusiastically supported the curtailment of civil liberties at home.
- 01:50
So people were down to party
- 01:52
with the government watching their party.
- 01:54
That means the PATRIOT Act occurred alongside A -
- 01:57
military intervention aimed at combatting terrorism.
- 02:01
The U.S. responded quickly and boldly to the attacks of September 11th.
- 02:05
Besides the PATRIOT Act,
- 02:06
America invaded Afghanistan in October of 2001,
- 02:10
and Iraq in March of 2003.
- 02:12
So A is the correct answer.
- 02:14
All of these actions were a part of the so-called
- 02:16
"war on terror,"
- 02:18
yet for all we did, the Saw movies managed
- 02:20
to escape unscathed.
- 02:23
Have you ever seen those Saw movies?
- 02:24
It's like oh, my God, terrifying.
- 02:26
Like I can't sit through them.
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