Would you rather…

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Would you rather… • Elect this guy or this guy

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Would you rather…. Elect this guy … or this guy. Thank God for Escobedo v. Illinois . Interrogation before Attorneys. Chapter 28: JFK and LBJ. John Fitzgerald Kennedy. John F. Kennedy was popularly known as JFK Decorated WWII hero - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Would you rather…

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Would you rather…

• Elect this guy … or this guy

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Thank God for Escobedo v. Illinois

• Interrogation before Attorneys

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Chapter 28: JFK and LBJ

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John Fitzgerald Kennedy

• • John F. Kennedy was popularly

known as JFK– Decorated WWII hero– Beautiful wife Jacqueline, two

young children • Came from a famous, elite,

wealthy family led by JFK’s father Joseph– Large extended family included

brothers Robert (RFK) and Edward (Ted)

• Many described the Kennedy presidency as Camelot– Symbolizing youth, vitality,

mystique, and power

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Election of 1960

• Democrat John F. Kennedy (MA Senator) vs. Republican Richard M. Nixon (Eisenhower’s Vice-President)

• Numerous TV ads and first televised debate usher in era of “packaged politicians”

• Debate results: – Showcased JFK: handsome, confident– Hurt Nixon: nervous, sweaty

• JFK wins close election

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JFK Inauguration

• First (and, to date, only) Catholic president

• Famous inaugural quote: “Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country”

• Speech clip• Began his presidency

with enemies among most Republicans and southern Democrats

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New Frontier

• JFK’s domestic initiatives came to known as the New Frontier– Congress defeated many of these

initiatives• Deficit spending on defense and

space programs helped spur the economy

• Major accomplishment was the expansion of Women’s Rights – Presidential Commission on

the Status of Women– Equal Pay Act of 1963

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The Warren Court

• Reapportionment (how political districts are drawn) court ordered that districts reflect “one man, one vote”

• Due Process (right to fair treatment and proper procedures)– Gideon v. Wainwright -

court appointed attorney– Escobedo v. Illinois –

attorney present during questioning

– Engel v. Vitale – school prayer banned

– Debate

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Do-Now• If you were going

to make a wall to keep out illegal immigrants, what would it look like? (Guard towers? Moats? Tigers?)

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JFK and Cold WarGlobal challenges included:1. Rivalry with Soviet Union 2. Stopping spread of

communism– Alliance for Progress provided

aid for developing countries, particularly Latin America

– Peace Corps sent young Americans to perform humanitarian missions in developing countries

3. Reduce threat of nuclear war– Flexible Response

• Reduce reliance on nuclear weapons• Increase development of

conventional weapons and buildup troop levels

4. Space Race– Man on moon by 1969

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Bay of Pigs• Fidel Castro had overthrown the

Batista government in 1959• Castro allied closely with Soviet Union• Invasion of Cuba planned by CIA

under Eisenhower– Train and arm 1400 Cuban exiles– Start uprising to overthrow Castro

• Invasion was disaster:– Boats ran aground– Air support cancelled– Almost all invaders were killed or

captured

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Berlin Wall• Soviet Premier Nikita

Khrushchev demanded the US withdraw from Berlin, Kennedy refused

• Khrushchev built Berlin Wall in 1961– Wall prevented

exodus of East Germans to the west

– Became iconic symbol of the Cold War

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Gate dividing Berlin in 1953

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Cuban Missile Crisis• The United States discovers

that nuclear missile sites are being built in Cuba– JFK announced on TV in

October 1962 that the Soviet Union had long-range missiles in Cuba

– Ordered a naval blockade of Cuba

– Demanded that Soviets dismantle missile sites

– Warns that US will respond to missile launch

– Only time in history the Strategic Air Command went to DEFCONN 2

• Nikita Khrushchev and the USSR responded– Continue the work on missile

sites– Agreed to negotiations

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Aerial Photo: Missile Convoy

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Aerial Photo: Missile Assembly

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Cuban Missile Crisis• Compromise is finally reached– Removal of Soviet missiles

from Cuba and the removal of American missiles from Turkey

• The impact of the crisis was important for both nations– Khrushchev loses power

and is eventually ousted– Soviets begin a massive

effort to close military gap with US

– Arms race escalates• Closest world has ever been

to nuclear war

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Do-Now•Put your research paper

in the HW bin• Think about this

question: Who killed JFK?

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Death of a President

Date: November 22, 1963Where: Dallas, TexasAssassin: Lee Harvey Oswald• JFK, wife Jacqueline,

TX Governor John Connolly and his wife were in the vehicle

• Presidential motorcade reached Dallas’ Dealey Plaza

• Video

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Dealey Plaza

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Texas School Book Depository overlooking Dealey Plaza

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Looking up to window of TSBD from spot of first shot

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Grassy Knoll on Dealey Plaza

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Mrs. Kennedy helps Secret Service agent climb into the car

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The mortally wounded President is rushed to Parkland Hospital

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Autopsy Photos

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Death of a President

• An avowed Marxist, Lee Harvey Oswald had lived in Soviet Union for a time

• Oswald was employee at Texas School Book Depository which overlooks Dealey Plaza– Rifle found in building links Oswald to

shooting• Arrested hours after assassination

and accused of killing the president– Oswald insists he is innocent

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Death of a President• Two days after his

arrest, Oswald is gunned down while in police custody

• Dallas nightclub owner, Jack Ruby, kills Oswald in full view of TV and press coverage– Death of Oswald leads

to speculation of conspiracy in JFK assassination

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Jack Ruby Shoots Oswald

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JFK Funeral

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Lyndon Baines Johnson

•Lyndon Johnson (LBJ) takes the oath of office on Air Force One shortly after the assassination

-Jacqueline Kennedy is at his side

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Lyndon Baines Johnson

• Raised in Texas, LBJ had a rough but direct style

• Many years of congressional experience– Became one of the senate’s

most influential leaders• Known for his ability to build

a consensus– Able to get much legislation

passed

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War on Poverty • Upon assuming office, LBJ launched his “War on Poverty”– Economic Opportunity Act –

created programs, jobs, Office of Economic Opportunity

– Neighborhood Youth Corps – assist poor young people obtain high school and college diplomas

– Job Corps – helped young people find jobs

– VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America) – young people volunteered in poor urban and rural areas

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Election of 1964• LBJ wins landslide victory

over Republican Barry Goldwater in 1964

• After election , LBJ works with congress on implementing Great Society– His vision of a better

America for all citizens

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Election of 1964

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Great Society • Many of the Great Society programs have had a lasting impact– Civil Rights Act of 1964 – makes

racial discrimination illegal– Voting Rights Act of 1965 –

ensures right to vote for African Americans

– Medicare – health benefits for retired and elderly persons

– Medicaid – health benefits for poor Americans

– Head Start – education for disadvantaged pre-schoolers

– HUD (Department of Housing and Urban Development) – affordable housing in inner cities

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Great Society • Great Society programs have had positive and negative consequences– Positives:

1. Benefits poor communities2. Helps minorities3. Programs have worked for

many years– Negatives:

1. Massive government spending

2. Creates entitlements (certain categories of Americans are “entitled” to benefits)

3. Big government bureaucracy