Chapter 36 Outline
I. Postwar Economic
Anxieties
1.
The Americans cheered the end of World
War II in 1945, but many worried that with the war over, the U.S. would sink
back into another Great Depression.
2.
Upon war’s end, inflation shot up with
the release of price controls while the gross national product sank, and labor
strikes swept the nation.
3.
To get even with labor, Congress passed
the Taft-Hartley Act, which outlawed “closed” shops (closed to non-union
members), made unions liable for damages that resulted from jurisdictional
disputes among themselves, and required that union leaders take non-communist oaths.
Opposite of the Wagner Act of the New Deal, this new act was a strike against
labor unions.
4.
Labor tried to organize in the South
and West with “Operation Dixie,” but this proved frustrating and unsuccessful.
5.
To forestall an economic downturn, the
Democratic administration sold war factories and other government installations
to private businesses cheaply. Congress passed the Employment Act of 1946, which
made it government policy to “promote maximum employment, production, and
purchasing power,” and created the Council of Economic Advisors to provide the
president with data to make that policy a reality.
6.
It also passed the Servicemen’s
Readjustment Act of 1944, better known as the GI Bill of Rights, which allowed
all servicemen to have free college education once they returned from the war.
II. The Long Economic
Boom, 1950-1970
1.
Then, in the late 1940s and into the
1960s, the economy began to boom tremendously, and folks who had felt the sting
of the Great Depression now wanted to bathe in the new prosperity.
2.
The middle class more than doubled while
people now wanted two cars in every garage; over 90% of American families owned
a television.
3.
Women also reaped the benefits of the
postwar economy, growing in the American work force while giving up their
former roles as housewives.
4.
Even though this new affluence did not
touch everyone, it did touch many.
III. The Roots of
Postwar Prosperity
1.
Postwar prosperity was fueled by several
factors, including the war itself that forced America to produce more than it’d
ever imagined. However, much of the prosperity of the 50s and 60s rested on
colossal military projects.
2.
Massive appropriations for the Korean
War, defense spending, industries like aerospace, plastics, and electronics,
and research and development all were such projects.
3.
R and D, research and development,
became an entirely new industry.
4.
Cheap energy paralleled the popularity
of automobiles, and spidery grids of electrical cables carried the power of
oil, gas, coal, and falling water into homes and factories alike.
5.
Workers upped their productivity tremendously,
as did farmers, due to new technology in fertilizers, etc. In fact, the farming
population shrank while production soared.
IV. The Smiling
Sunbelt
1.
With so many people on the move,
families were being strained. Combined with the baby boom, this explained the
success of Dr. Benjamin Spock’s The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care.
2.
Immigration also led to the growth of a
fifteen-state region in the southern half of the U.S. known as the Sunbelt,
which dramatically increased in population.
3.
In fact, in the 1950s, California
overtook New York as the most populous state.
4.
Immigrants came to the Sunbelt for more
opportunities, such as in California’s electronics industry and the aerospace
complexes of Texas and Florida.
5.
Federal dollars poured into the Sunbelt
(some $125 million), and political power grew there as well, as ever since
1964, every U.S. president has come from that region.
6.
Sunbelters were redrawing the political
map, taking the economic and political power out of the North and Northeast.
V. The Rush to the
Suburbs
1.
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
2.
By 1960, one out of ever four Americans
lived in the suburbs.
3.
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.
the poor and the African-Americans.
4.
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
1.
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.
2.
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.
3.
By around 2020, they will place
enormous strains on the Social Security system.
VII. Truman: the
“Gutty” Man from Missouri
1.
Presiding after World War II was Harry
S. Truman, who had come to power after Franklin Roosevelt had died from a
massive brain hemorrhage.
2.
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.
3.
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.
4.
Often, Truman would stick to a wrong
decision just to prove his decisiveness and power of command.
5.
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?
1.
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.
2.
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.
3.
The Soviet Union was also granted
control of the Manchurian railroads and received special privileges to Dairen
and Port Arthur.
4.
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
1.
With the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R. as the
only world superpowers after WWII, trouble seemed imminent, for the U.S. had
waited until 1933, 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.
2.
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.
3.
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
1.
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.
2.
The United Nations opened on April 25,
1945.
3.
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.
4.
The Senate overwhelmingly approved the
U.N. by a vote of 89 to 2.
5.
The U.N. kept peace in Kashmir and other
trouble spots, created the new Jewish state of Israel, formed such groups as
UNESCO (U.N. Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization), FAO (Food and
Agricultural Organization), and WHO (World Health Organization), bringing benefits
to people all over the globe.
6.
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
1.
The Nuremberg Trials of 1945-46
severely punished 22 top culprits of the Holocaust.
2.
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.
3.
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.
4.
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.
5.
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
1.
When, in 1946, Stalin used his troops
to aid a rebel movement in Iran, Truman protested, and the Soviets backed down.
2.
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.
3.
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.
4.
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.”
5.
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.
6.
This helped in the forming of the
European Community (EC). The plan sent $12.5 billion over four years to 16
cooperating nations to aid in recovery, and at first, Congress didn’t want to comply,
especially when this sum was added to the $2 billion the U.S. was already
giving to European relief as part of the United Nations Relief and
Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA).
7.
However, a Soviet-sponsored coup that
toppled the government of Czechoslovakia finally awakened the Congressmen to
their senses, and they passed the plan.
8.
Truman also recognized Israel on its
birthday, May 14, 1948, despite heavy Arab opposition and despite the fact that
those same Arabs controlled the oil supplies in the Middle East.
XIII. America Begins
to Rearm
1.
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.
2.
The National Security Act also formed
the National Security Council (NSC) to advise the president on security matters
and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to coordinate the government’s
foreign fact-gathering (spying).
3.
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.
4.
In 1948, the U.S. joined Britain, France,
Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg to form the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO), which considered an attack on one NATO member an attack on
all, despite the U.S.’s policy of traditionally not involving itself in entangling
alliances.
5.
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
1.
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.
2.
However, in China, the communist
forces, led by Mao Zedong, defeated the nationalist forces, led by Chiang
Kai-shek, who then fled to the island of Formosa (Taiwan) in 1949.
3.
With this defeat, one-quarter of the
world population (500,000,000 people) plunged under the Communist flag.
4.
Critics of Truman assailed that he did
not support the nationalists enough, but Chiang Kai-shek never had the support
of the people to begin with.
5.
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.
6.
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
1.
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.
2.
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.
3.
In 1949, 11 communists were brought to
a New York jury for violating the Smith Act of 1940, which had been the first peacetime
anti-sedition law since 1798.
4.
They were convicted, sent to prison,
and their conviction was upheld by the 1951 case Dennis v. United States.
5.
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.
6.
In February 1950, Joseph R. McCarthy
burst upon the scene, charging that there were scores of unknown communists in
the State Department.
7.
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?
8.
Truman vetoed the McCarran Internal
Security Bill, which would’ve let the president arrest and detain suspicious
people during an “internal security emergency.”
9.
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.
10. Their
sensational trial, electrocution, and sympathy for their two children began to
sober America zeal in red hunting.
XVI. Democratic
Divisions in 1948
1.
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.
2.
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.
3.
Former vice president Henry A. Wallace
also threw his hat into the ring, getting nominated by the new Progressive
Party.
4.
With the Democrats totally disorganized,
Dewey seemed destined for a super-easy victory, and on election night, the
Chicago Tribune even ran an early edition wrongly proclaiming “DEWEY DEFEATS TRUMAN,”
but Truman shockingly won, getting 303 electoral votes to Dewey’s 189. And to
make things better, the Democrats won control of Congress again. Truman
received critical support from farmers, workers, and blacks.
5.
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.
6.
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.
7.
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)
1.
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).
2.
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.
3.
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.
4.
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
1.
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.
2.
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.
3.
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.
4.
MacArthur returned to cheers while
Truman was scorned as a “pig,” an “imbecile,” an appeaser to communist Russia
and China, and a “Judas.”
5.
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.
No comments:
Post a Comment