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G. I. Bill

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Chapter 22 & 23 G. I. Bill Taft-Hartley Act The Taft Hartley Act was passed to try to limit the power of labor unions. This act instituted the idea of the Open Shop ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: G. I. Bill


1
Chapter 22 23
2
G. I. Bill
3
Taft-Hartley Act
  • The Taft Hartley Act was passed to try to limit
    the power of labor unions.
  • This act instituted the idea of the Open Shop
    which meant that a worker did not have to join
    the union to work at a company.
  • States with heavy union activity used a Closed
    Shop, which meant that the worker had to join the
    union to work at an establishment.

4
Truman and the Steel Strike
  • The 1952 steel strike was by the United
    Steelworkers of America against U.S. Steel
  • The strike was scheduled to begin on April 9,
    1952, but President Truman nationalized the steel
    industry hours before the workers walked out.
  • The steel companies sued to regain control of
    their facilities.
  • the Supreme Court ruled in Youngstown Sheet
    Tube Co. v. Sawyer, that the president lacked the
    authority to seize the steel mills.

5
The Fair Deal
  • The Fair Deal was the name of Trumans
    legislative agenda.
  • Included in the program was a raise of the
    minimum wage, a national housing, an expansion of
    Social Security and a Civil Rights Bill
  • Congress passed all of the agenda except the
    Civil Rights bill.

6
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7
The Election of 1948
  • Sometimes referred to as the Miracle of 1948
  • It was taken for granted that Truman would be
    defeated in the wake of desegregating the Army.
  • He was opposed by Thomas Dewey representing the
    Republicans and by Strom Thurmond representing
    the Dixiecrats.
  • The Dixiecrats were a pro-segregation, states
    rights party that formed in opposition to
    integration.
  • Truman won the election in one of the greatest
    upsets in electoral history.

8
The Checkers Speech
  • The Checkers Speech is one of the most famous
    political stunts ever pulled.
  • Nixon was the vice presidential candidate in 1952
    and it was found that he was using unreported
    payments from businessmen to maintain his
    lifestyle.
  • Nixon went on national television and convinced
    the American people to support him in one of the
    most maudlin speeches ever written.

9
Election of 1952
  • The election of 1952 was a referendum on the Cold
    War.
  • People were tired of reform by the Democrats and
    wanted a return to a more conservative president.
  • They chose Dwight D. Eisenhower.
  • His politics were a mystery, he was courted by
    both the Republicans and Democrats
  • He described his politics as dynamic
    conservatism
  • What this meant was that he would follow a more
    conservative agenda, but would not simply do
    nothing like the last Republican president,
    Hoover, had done.

10
Interstate Highway Act of 1956
11
Multinational Corporations
12
The Organization Man
  • The Organization Man was a bestselling book by
    William H. Whyte
  • It is considered one of the most influential
    books on management ever written.
  • A central idea of the book is that average
    Americans believed in a collectivist ethic rather
    than to rugged individualism.
  • He observed that this system led to risk-averse
    executives who faced no consequences and could
    expect jobs for life as long as they made no
    egregious missteps.

13
The Beats
14
The Beat Generation
  • The Beat Generation was a group of American
    post-World War II writers who came to prominence
    in the 1950s.
  • Central elements of "Beat" culture included
    experimentation with drugs, alternative forms of
    sexuality, an interest in Eastern religion, a
    rejection of materialism, and the idealizing of
    exuberant means of expression
  • Allen Ginsberg's Howl
  • William S. Burroughs's Naked Lunch
  • Jack Kerouac's On the Road
  • Both Howl and Naked Lunch were the focus of
    obscenity trials that ultimately helped to
    liberalize publishing in the United States.
  • The Beat Generation developed a reputation as new
    bohemian hedonists, who celebrated non-conformity
    and spontaneous creativity.

15
Transistors
16
The Other America by Michael Harrington
17
Suburbia
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