Chapter 38 Outline
I. Kennedy’s “New
Frontier” Spirit
1.
In 1960, young, energetic John F. Kennedy
was elected as president of the United States—the youngest man ever elected to
that office.
2.
The 1960s would bring a sexual
revolution, a civil rights revolution, the emergence of a “youth culture,” a devastating
war in Vietnam, and the beginnings of a feminist revolution.
3.
JFK delivered a stirring inaugural
address (“Ask not, what your country can do for you…”), and he also assembled a
very young cabinet, including his brother, Robert Kennedy, as attorney general.
4.
Robert Kennedy tried to recast the
priorities of the FBI, but was resisted by J. Edgar Hoover.
5.
Business whiz Robert S. McNamara took
over the Defense Department.
6.
Early on, JFK proposed the Peace Corps,
an army of idealist and mostly youthful volunteers to bring American skills to
underdeveloped countries.
7.
A graduate of Harvard and with a young
family, JFK was very vibrant and charming to everyone.
II. The New Frontier
at Home
1.
Kennedy’s social program was known as
the New Frontier, but conservative Democrats and Republicans threatened to kill
many of its reforms.
2.
JFK did expand the House Rules
Committee, but his program didn’t expand quickly, as medical and education
bills remained stalled in Congress.
3.
JFK also had to keep a lid on inflation
and maintain a good economy. However, almost immediately into his term, steel
management announced great price increases, igniting the fury of the president,
but JFK also earned fiery attacks by big business against the New Frontier.
4.
Kennedy’s tax-cut bill chose to
stimulate the economy through price-cutting.
5.
Kennedy also promoted a project to land
Americans on the moon, though apathetic Americans often ridiculed this goal.
III. Rumblings in
Europe
1.
JFK met Russian Premier Nikita
Khrushchev and was threatened, but didn’t back down.
2.
In August of the 1961, the Soviets
began building the Berlin Wall to separate East and West Germany.
3.
Western Europe, though, was now
prospering after help from the super-successful Marshall Plan.
4.
America had also encouraged a Common
Market (to keep trade barriers and tariff low in Europe), which later became
the European Union (EU).
5.
The so-called Kennedy Round of tariff
negotiations eased trade between Europe and the U.S.
6.
Unfortunately, French leader Charles de
Gaulle was one who was suspicious of the U.S., and he rejected Britain’s
application into the Common Market.
IV. Foreign Flare-Ups
and “Flexible Response”
1.
There were many world problems at this
time: The African Congo got its independence from Belgium in 1960 and then
erupted into violence, but the United Nations sent a peacekeeping force.
2.
Laos, freed of its French overlords in
1954, was being threatened by communism, but at the Geneva Conference of 1962,
peace was shakily imposed.
3.
Defense Secretary McNamara pushed a
strategy of “flexible response,” which developed an array of military options
that could match the gravity of whatever crises came to hand.
4.
One of these was the Green Berets, AKA,
the “Special Forces”.
V. Stepping into the
Vietnam Quagmire
1.
The American-backed Diem government had
shakily and corruptly ruled Vietnam since 1954, but it was threatened by the
communist Viet Cong movement led by Ho Chi Minh.
2.
JFK slowly sent more and more U.S.
troops to Vietnam to “maintain order,” but they usually fought and died,
despite the fact that it was “Vietnam’s war.”
VI. Cuban
Confrontations
1.
Kennedy’s Alliance for Progress was
dubbed the “Marshall Plan for Latin America,” and it aimed to close the
rich-poor gap in Latin American and thus stem communism. However, too many
Latin Americans felt that it was too little, too late.
2.
Kennedy also backed a U.S.-aided invasion
of Cuba by rebels, but when the Bay of Pigs Invasion occurred, on April 17,
1961, it was a disaster, as Kennedy did not bring in the air support, and the
revolt failed.
3.
This event pushed recently imposed
Cuban leader Fidel Castro closer to the communist camp.
4.
JFK took full responsibility for the
attack, and his popularity actually went up.
5.
Then, in 1962, U.S. spy planes recorded
missile installations in Cuba. It was later revealed that these were, in fact,
nuclear missiles aimed at America.
6.
The Cuban Missile Crisis lasted 13
nerve-racking days and put the U.S., the U.S.S.R., and the world at the brink
of nuclear war. But in the end, Khrushchev blinked, backed off of a U.S. naval
blockade, looked very weak and indecisive, and lost his power soon afterwards.
7.
The Soviets agreed to remove their
missiles if the U.S. vowed to never invade Cuba again; the U.S. also removed their
own Russia-aimed nuclear missiles in Turkey.
8.
There was also a direct phone call line
(the “hot line”) installed between Washington D.C. and Moscow, in case of any
crisis.
9.
In June, 1963, Kennedy spoke, urging
better feelings toward the Soviets and beginning the modest policy of détente,
or relaxed tension in the Cold War.
VII. The Struggle for
Civil Rights
1.
While Kennedy had campaigned a lot to
appeal to black voters, when it came time to help them, he was hesitant and
seemingly unwilling, taking much action.
2.
In the 1960s, groups of Freedom Riders
chartered buses to tour through the South to try to end segregation, but white
mobs often reacted violently towards them. This drew more attention to the segregation
and what went on down South.
3.
Slowly but surely, Kennedy urged civil
rights along, encouraging the establishment of the SNCC, a Voter Education
Project to register the South’s blacks to vote.
4.
Some places desegregated painlessly,
but others were volcanoes.
5.
29 year-old James Meredith tried to
enroll at the University of Mississippi, but white students didn’t let him, so
Kennedy had to send some 400 federal marshals and 3,000 troops to ensure that
Meredith could enroll in his first class.
6.
In spring of 1963, Martin Luther King,
Jr. launched a peaceful campaign against discrimination in Birmingham, Alabama,
but police and authorities responded viciously, often using extremely
high-pressured water hoses to “hose down” the sit-in protesters.
7.
The entire American public watched in
horror as the black protesters were treated with such contempt, since the
actions were shown on national TV.
8.
Later, on June 11, 1963, JFK made a
speech urging immediate action towards this “moral issue” in a passionate plea.
9.
Still, more violence followed, as in
September 1963, a bomb exploded in a Birmingham church, killing four black
girls who had just finished their church lesson.
VIII. The Killing of
Kennedy
1.
On November 22, 1963, while riding down
a street in Dallas, Texas, JFK was shot and killed, allegedly by Lee Harvey
Oswald, who was himself shot by self-proclaimed avenger Jack Ruby, and there
was much controversy and scandal and conspiracy in the assassination.
2.
Lyndon B. Johnson became the new president
of the United States as only the fourth president to succeed an assassinated
president.
3.
It was only after Kennedy’s death that
America realized what a charismatic, energetic, and vibrant president they had
lost.
IX. The LBJ Brand on
the Presidency
1.
Lyndon Johnson had been a senator in the
1940s and 50s, his idol was Franklin D. Roosevelt, and he could manipulate
Congress very well (through his in-your-face “Johnson treatment”); also, he was
very vain and egotistical.
2.
As a president, LBJ went from conservative
to liberal, helping pass a Civil Rights Act of 1964, which banned all racial
discrimination in most private facilities open to the public, including
theaters, hospitals, and restaurants.
3.
Also created was the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (EEOC), which was
4.
aimed at eliminating discriminatory
hiring.
5.
Johnson’s program was dubbed the “Great
Society,” and it reflected its New Deal inspirations.
6.
Public support for the program was
aroused by Michael Harrington’s The Other America, which revealed that over 20%
of American suffered in poverty.
X. Johnson Battles
Goldwater in 1964
1.
In 1964, LBJ was opposed by Republican
Arizona senator Barry Goldwater who attacked the federal income tax, the Social
Security system, the Tennessee Valley Authority, civil rights legislation, the nuclear
test-ban treaty, and the Great Society.
2.
However, Johnson used the Tonkin Gulf
Incident, in which North Vietnamese ships allegedly fired on American ships, to
attack (at least partially) Vietnam, and he also got approval for the Tonkin
Gulf Resolution, which gave him a virtual blank check on what he could do in affairs
in Vietnam.
3.
But on election day, Johnson won a huge
landslide over Goldwater to stay president.
XI. The Great Society
Congress
1.
Johnson’s win was also coupled by
sweeping Democratic wins that enabled him to pass his Great Society programs.
2.
Congress doubled the appropriation on
the Office of Economic Opportunity to $2 billion and granted more than $1
billion to refurbish Appalachia, which had been stagnant.
3.
Johnson also created the Department of
Transportation and the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD),
headed by Robert C. Weaver, the first black cabinet secretary in the United
States’ history.
4.
LBJ also wanted aid to education,
medical care for the elderly and indigent, immigration reform, and a new voting
rights bill.
5.
Johnson gave money to students, not
schools, thus avoiding the separation of church and state by not technically
giving money to Christian schools.
6.
In 1965, new programs called Medicare
and Medicaid were installed, which gave certain rights to the elderly and the needy
in terms of medicine and health maintenance.
7.
The Immigration and Nationality Act of
1965 abolished the “national origin” quota and doubled the number of immigrants
allowed to enter the U.S. annually, up to 290,000.
8.
An antipoverty program called Project
Head Start improved the performance of the underprivileged in education. It was
“pre-school” for the poor.
XII. Battling for
Black Rights
1.
Johnson’s Voting Rights Act of 1965
attacked racial discrimination at the polls by outlawing literacy tests and sending
voting registrars to the polls.
2.
The 24th Amendment eliminated poll
taxes, and in the “freedom summer” of 1964, both blacks and white students
joined to combat discrimination and racism.
3.
However, in June of 1964, a black and
two white civil rights workers were found murdered, and 21 white Mississippians
were arrested for the murders, but the all-white jury refused to convict the
suspects. Also, an integrated “Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party” was denied
its seat.
4.
Early in 1965, Martin Luther King, Jr.
resumed a voter-registration campaign in Selma, Alabama, but was assaulted with
tear gas by state troopers.
5.
LBJ’s responded by calling for America
to overcome bigotry, racism, and discrimination.
XIII. Black Power
1.
1965 began a period of violent black protests,
such as the one in the Watts area of L.A., as black leaders, mocking Martin
Luther King, Jr., like Malcolm X (born Malcolm Little), who was inspired by the
Nation of Islam and its founder, Elijah Muhammed. They urged action now, even
if it required violence, to the tune of his battle cry, “by any means
necessary.” But, Malcolm X was killed in 1965 by an assassin.
2.
The Black Panthers openly brandished
weapons in Oakland, California.
3.
Trinidad-born Stokely Carmichael led
the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee and urged an abandonment of
peaceful demonstrations.
4.
Black power became a rallying cry by
blacks seeking more rights, but just as they were getting them, more riots
broke out, and nervous whites threatened with retaliation.
5.
Tragically, on April 4, 1968, Martin
Luther King, Jr. was assassinated.
6.
Quietly, though, thousands of blacks
registered to vote and went into integrated classrooms, and they slowly built themselves
into a politically powerful group.
XIV. Combating
Communism in Two Hemispheres
1.
Johnson sent men to put down a supposedly
communist coup in the Dominican Republic and was denounced as over-anxious and
too hyper.
2.
In Vietnam, though, he slowly sent more
and more U.S. men to fight the war, and the South Vietnamese became spectators
in their own war. Meanwhile, more and more Americans died.
3.
By 1968, he had sent more than half a
million troops to Asia, and was pouring in $30 billion annually, yet the end
was nowhere in sight.
XV. Vietnam Vexations
1.
America was floundering in Vietnam and
was being condemned for its actions there, and French leader Charles de Gaulle
also ordered NATO off French soil in 1966.
2.
In the Six-Day War, Israel stunned the
world by defeating Egypt (and its Soviet backers) and gaining new territory in
the Sinai Peninsula, the Golan Heights, the Gaza Strip, and the West Bank of
the Jordan River, including Jerusalem.
3.
Meanwhile, numerous protests in America
went against the Vietnam War and the draft.
4.
Opposition was headed by the influential
Senate Committee of Foreign Relations, headed by Senator William Fullbright of
Arkansas. “Doves” (peace lovers) and “Hawks” (war supporters) clashed.
5.
Both sides (the U.S. and North Vietnam)
did try to have intervals of quiet time in bombings, but they merely used those
as excuses to funnel more troops into the area.
6.
Johnson also ordered the CIA to spy on
domestic antiwar activists, and he encouraged the FBI to use its
Counterintelligence Program (“Cointelpro”) against the peace movement.
7.
More and more, America was trapped in an
awful Vietnam War, and it couldn’t get out, thus feeding more and more hatred
and resentment to the American public.
XVI. Vietnam Topples
Johnson
1.
Johnson was personally suffering at the
American casualties, and he wept as he signed condolence letters and even
prayed with Catholic monks in a nearby church—at night, secretly. And, the fact
that North Vietnam had almost taken over Saigon in a blistering attack called
the Tet Offensive didn’t help either.
2.
Johnson also saw a challenge for the
Democratic ticket from Eugene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy, and the nation, as
well as the Democratic party, was starting to be split by Vietnam.
3.
LBJ refused to sign an order for more
troops to Vietnam.
4.
Then, on March 31, 1968, Johnson
declared that he would stop sending in troops to Vietnam and that he would not
run in 1968, shocking America.
XVII. The
Presidential Sweepstakes of 1968
1.
On June 5, 1968, Robert Kennedy was
shot fatally, and the Democratic ticket went to Hubert Humphrey, Johnson’s “heir.”
2.
The Republicans responded with Richard
Nixon, paired with Spiro Agnew, and there was also a third-party candidate:
George C. Wallace, former governor of Alabama, a segregationist who wanted to
bomb the Vietnamese to death.
3.
Nixon won a nail-biter, and Wallace
didn’t do that badly either, though worse than expected.
4.
A minority president, he owed his
presidency to protests over the war, the unfair draft, crime, and rioting.
XVIII. The Obituary
of Lyndon Johnson
1.
Poor Lyndon Johnson returned to his
Texas ranch and died there in 1973.
2.
He had committed Americans into Vietnam
with noble intentions, and he really wasn’t a bad guy, but he was stuck in a
time when he was damned if he did and damned if he didn’t.
XIX. The Cultural
Upheaval of the 1960s
1.
In the 60s, the youth of America
experimented with sex, drugs, and defiance. They protested against conventional
wisdom, authority, and traditional beliefs.
2.
Poets like Allen Ginsberg and novelists
like Jack Kerouac (who wrote On the Road) voiced these opinions of the Beatnik
generation.
3.
Movies like The Wild One with Marlon
Brando and Rebel without a Cause starring James Dean also showed this belief.
Essentially, they championed the “ne’er-do-well” and the outcast.
4.
At the UC-Berkeley, in 1964, a
so-called Free Speech Movement began.
5.
Kids tried drugs, “did their own thing”
in new institutions, and rejected patriotism.
6.
In 1948, Indiana University
“sexologist” Dr. Alfred Kinsey had published Sexual Behavior in the Human Male,
and had followed that book five years later with a female version. His findings
about the incidence of premarital sex and adultery were very controversial.
7.
He also estimated that 10% of all
American males were gay.
8.
The Manhattan Society, founded in L.A.
in 1951, pioneered gay rights.
9.
Students for a Democratic Society, once
against war, later spawned an underground terrorist group called the
Weathermen.
10. The
upheavals of the 1960s and the anti-establishment movement can largely be attributed
to the three P’s: the youthful population bulge, the protest against racism and
the Vietnam War, and the apparent permanence of prosperity, but as the 1970s
rolled around, this prosperity gave way to stagnation.
11. However,
the “counterculture” of the youths of the 1960s did significantly weaken
existing values, ideas, and beliefs.
No comments:
Post a Comment