Friday, March 29, 2013

Chapter 42
I. Economic Revolutions
1.As heavy industry waned, the information age kicked into high gear. •Microsoft Corp. and the internet brought about the communications revolution.
•Entrepreneurs led the way to making the Internet a 21st century mall, library, and shopping center.
•Speed and efficiency of new communications tools threatened to wipe out other jobs.
2.White-collar jobs in financial services and high tech engineering were being outsourced to other countries like Ireland and India. •Employees could thus help keep the company’s global circuits working 24 hrs. a day.
3.Many discovered that the new high tech economy was also prone to boom or bust, just like the old economy. •In the Spring of 2000, the stock market began its biggest slide since WWII.
•By 2003, the market had lost $6 trillion in value. •American’s pension plans shrank to 1/3 or more.
•Recent retirees scrambled to get jobs and offset their pension losses which were tied to the stock market.
•This showed that Americans were still scarcely immune to risk, error, scandal, and the ups-and-downs of the business cycle.
4.Scientific research propelled the economy. •Researchers unlocked the secrets of molecular genetics (1950s). •They developed new strains of high yielding, pest/weather resistant crops.
•They sought to cure hereditary diseases.
•The movement started to fix genetic mutations.
•The "Human Genome Project" established the DNA sequence of the 30 thousand human genes, helping create radical new medical therapies.
•Breakthroughs in cloning animals raised questions about the legitimacy of cloning technology in human reproduction.
•Stem Cell Research, where zygotes or fertilized human eggs, offered possible cures for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. •The Bush administration, and many religious groups, believed that this research was killing people in the form of a human fetus.
•Bush said a fetus is still a human life, despite its small size, and experimenting and destroying it is therefore wrong. For this reason, he limited government funding for stem cell research.

 II. Affluence and Inequality
1.U.S. standard of living was high compared to the rest of human kind •Median household income in 2002 = $42,400
2.Americans, however, weren’t the world’s wealthiest people
3.Rich still got richer while the poor got poorer •The richest 20% in 2001 raked in nearly half the nation’s income while the poorest 20% got a mere 4%
4.The Welfare Reform Bill (1996) restric5ted access to social services and required able-bodied welfare recipients to find work. •This further weakened the financial footing of many impoverished families.
5.Widening inequality could be measured in different ways as well •Chief executives roughly earned 245 times as much as the average worker
•In 2004, over 40 million people had no medical insurance
•34 million (12% of population) were impoverished
6.Causes of the widening income gap •The tax and fiscal policies of the Reagan and both Bush presidencies
•Intensifying global economic competition
•shrinkage of high-paying manufacturing jobs for semiskilled/unskilled workers
•the decline of unions
•the economic rewards to those of higher education
•the growth of part time and temporary work
•the increase of low-skilled immigrants
•the tendency of educated, working men and woman marriages, creating households w/ high incomes
7.Educational opportunities also had a way of perpetuating inequality •under funding of many schools in poor urban areas

 III. The Feminist Revolution
1.Women were greatly affected by the great economic changes of the late 20th Century
2.Over 5 decades, women steadily increased their presence in the work place
3.By 1990s, nearly half of all workers were women
4.Most surprising was the upsurge of employment in mothers •by 1990s, a majority of women with kids as young as one were working
5.Many universities opened their doors to women (1960s): •Yale•Princeton•West Point
The Citadel and Virginia Military Institute (VMI)
6.Despite these gains, many feminists remained frustrated •women still got lower wages
•were concentrated in few low-prestige, low-paying occupations •For example, in 2002, on 29 % of women were lawyers or judges and 25% physicians
•This is likely due to women would interrupt their careers to bear and raise kids and even took a less demanding job to fulfill the traditional family roles
7.Discrimination and a focus on kids also helped account for the “gender-gap” in elections •Women still voted for Democrats more than men •They seemed to be more willing to favor gov’t support for health and child care, education, and job equality, as well as more vigilant in protecting abortion rights—thus, Democratic voters.
8.Mens’ lives changed in the 2000s as well •Some employers gave maternity leave as well as paternity leave in recognition of shared obligations of the two worker household.
•More men shared the traditional female responsibilities •cooking, laundry, and child care
9.In 1993, congress passed the Family Leave Bill, mandating job protection for working fathers as well as mothers who needed to take time off from work for family reasons

IV. New Families and Old
1.The nuclear family suffered heavy blows in modern America •by 1990s, one out of every two marriages ended in divorce
•7x more children were affected by divorce compared to the beginning of the decade
•Kids who commuted between parents was common ground
2.Traditional families weren’t just falling apart at an alarming rate, but were also increasingly slow to form in the first place. •The proportion of adults living alone tripled in the 4 decades after 1950s
•In 1990s, 1/3 of women age 25 - 29 had never married
•Every forth child in US was growing up in a household that lacked two parents
3.The reason for this •the pauperization of many women and children (single parent income = HARD)
•Single parent hood was the #1 cause for the reason behind poverty
4.Child raising, the reason behind a family, was being pawned off to day-care centers, school, or TV (electronic babysitter)
5.Viable families now assumed a variety of different forms •Kids in households were raised by a single parent, stepparent, or grandparent, and even kids with gay parents encountered a degree of acceptance that would have been unimaginable a century earlier.
•Gay marriage and teenage pregnancy was on a decline after the mid-1900s
6.Families weren’t evaporating, but were altering into much different forms

 V. The Aging of America
1.Old age was expected, due to the fact that Americans were living longer than ever before •People born in 2000 could anticipate living to an average 70 years Miraculous medical advances lengthened and strengthened lives
1.Longer lives = more older people •1 American in 8 was over 65 years of age in 2000
2.This aging of population raised a slew of economic, social, and political questions •Old people formed a potent electoral bloc that aggressively lobbied for gov’t favors and achieved real gains for senior citizens
•The share of GNP spent on health care for people over 65 more than doubled
•The more payments to healthcare, hurt education, thus making social and economic problems further down the road. •The old are getting helped, but the young are being punished for it
3.These triumphs for senior citizens brought fiscal strains, like on Social Security •At the beginning of the creation of Social Security, a small majority depended on it.
•But by now, it has increased, and now workers’ Social Security is actually being funded to the senior citizens. WHY? •The ratio of active workers to retirees had dropped so low, that drastic adjustments were necessary
•Worsened further, when med care for seniors rose out of their price range
4.As WW2 baby boomers began to retire the Unfunded Liability (the difference between what the gov’t promised to pay to the elderly and the taxes it expected to take in) was about $7 trillion, a number that might destroy US if new reforms weren’t adopted •Pressures mounted: •to persuade older Americans to work longer
•invest the current Social Security surplus in equalities and bonds to meet future obligations
•privatize a portion of the Social Security to younger people who wanted to invest some of their pay-roll taxes into individual retirement accounts

 VI. The New Immigration
1.Newcomers continued to flow into Modern America •Nearly 1 million per year from 1980s up to 2000s
•Contradicting history, Europe provided few compared to Asia/Latin America
2.What prompted new immigration to the US? •New immigrants came for many of the same reasons as the old… •they left countries where population was increasing rapidly and…
•where agricultural/industrial revolutions were shaking people loose of old habits of life
•they came in search of jobs and economic opportunities
3.Some came with skills and even professional degrees and found their way into middle-class jobs •However, most came with fewer skills/less education, seeking work as janitors, nannies, farm laborers, lawn cutters, or restraint workers.
4.The southwest felt immigration the hardest, since Mexican migrants came heavily from there •By the turn of the century, Latinos made up nearly 1/3 of the population in California, Arizona, and Texas, and nearly 40% in New Mexico
 •Latinos succeeded in making the south west a bi-cultural region by holding onto to their culture by strength in numbers, compared to most immigrants whom had to conform. Plus, it did help to have their ‘mothering country” right next door.
5.Some “old-stock” Americans feared about the modern America’s capacity to absorb all these immigrants. •The Immigration Reform and Control Act (1986) attempted to choke off illegal entry by penalizing employers of the undocumented aliens and by granting amnesty of those already here.
 •Ant-immigrant sentiment flared (a lot in CA) in the wake of economic recession in the early 1990s •CA voters approved a ballot initiative that attempted to deny benefits, including education, to illegal immigrants (later struck down by courts)
 •State then passed another law in 1998 which put an end to bilingual teaching in state schools
6.The fact was, that only 11.5% of foreign-born people accounted for the US population
 7.Evidence, nonetheless, still showed that US welcomed and needed immigrants
 8.The good side to it… •Immigrants took jobs that Americans didn’t want
 •Infusion of young immigrants and their offspring counter-balanced the overwhelming rate of an aging population

 VII. Beyond the Melting Pot
1.Thanks to their increasing immigration and high birthrate Latinos were becoming an increasingly important minority •By 2003, the US was home to about 39 million of them •26 million Chicanos, Mexican American
 •3 million Puerto Ricans
 •1 million Cubans
2.Flexing political powers, Latinos elected mayors of Miami, Denver, and San Antonio
 3.After many years of struggle, the United Farm Workers Organizing Committee (UFWOC0, headed by Cesar Chavez, succeeded in making working conditions better for Chicano “stoop laborers” who followed the planting cycle of the American West
 4.Latino influence seemed likely to grow •Latinos, well organized, became the nation’s largest ethnic minority
5.Asian Americans also made great strides. •By the 1980s, they were America’s fastest-growing minority and their numbers reached about 12 million by 2003.
 •Citizens of Asian ancestry were now counted among the most prosperous •In 2003, the average Asian household was 25% better off than that of the average white household
6.Indians, the original Americans, numbered some 2.4 million in 2000 census. •Half had left their reservations to live in cities.
 •Unemployment and alcoholism had blighted reservation life
 •Many tribes took advantage of their special legal status of independence by opening up casinos on reservations to the public.
 •However, discrimination and poverty proved hard to break

 VIII. Cities and Suburbs
1.Cities grew less safe, crime was the great scourge of urban life. •The rate of violent crimes raised to its peak in the drug infested 80s, but then leveled out in the 90s.
 •The number of violent crimes substantially dropped in many areas after 1995
 •None the less, murders, robberies and rapes remained common in cities and rural areas and the suburbs
2.In mid-1990s, a swift and massive transition took place from cities to suburbs, making jobs “suburbanized.” •The nation’s brief “urban age” lasted for only a little less than 7 decades and with it, Americans noticed a new form of isolationism
 •Some affluent suburban neighborhoods stayed secluded, by staying locked in “gated communities”
 •By the first decade of the 21st century, big suburban rings around cities like NY, Chicago, Houston, and Washington DC had become more racially and ethically diverse
3.Suburbs grew faster in the West and Southwest •Builders of roads, water mains, and schools could barely keep up with the new towns sprouting up across the landscapes
 •Newcomers came from nearby cities and from across the nation •A huge shift of US population was underway from East to West
 •The Great Plains hurt from the 60% decline of all counties
4.However, some cities showed signs of renewal •Commercial redevelopment gained ground in cities like… •New York•Chicago•Los Angeles•Boston•San Francisco

 IX. Minority America
1.Racial and ethic tensions also exacerbated the problems of American Cities •This was specifically evident in LA (magnet for minorities) •It was a 1992 case wherein a mostly white jury exonerated white cops who had been videotaped ferociously beating a black suspect.
 •The minority neighborhoods of LA erupted in anger •Arson and looting laid waste on every block
 •Many people were killed
 •Many blacks vented their anger towards the police/judicial system by attacking Asian shopkeepers
 •In return, Asians set up patrols to protect themselves
 •The chaos still lingers decades later
•LA riots vividly testified to black skepticism about the US system of justice •Three years later, in LA, a televised showing of OJ Simpson’s murder trial fed white disillusionment w/ the state of race relations
 •after months of testimony, it looked like OJ was guilty, but was acquitted due to the fact some white cops had been shown to harbor racist sentiments
 •In a a later civil trail, another jury unanimously found Simpson liable for the “wrongful deaths” of his former wife and another victim
 •The Simpson verdicts revealed the huge gap between white and black America (whites = guilty, blacks = 1st verdict stands)
•Blacks still felt that they were mistreated, especially in 2000 elections when they accused that they weren’t allowed to vote in Florida. •Said they were still facing the Jim Crow South of racial indifference
2.US cities have always held an astonishing variety of ethnic/racial groups, but by 20th century, minorities made up the majority, making whites flee to the suburbs •In 2002, 52% of blacks and only 21% of whites lived in central cities
3.The most desperate black ghettos were especially problematic •Blacks who benefited form the 60s Civil Rights Movement left to the suburbs with whites leaving the poorest of the poor in the old ghettos.
 •Without a middle class to help the community, the cities became plagued by unemployment and drug addiction
4.Single women headed about 43% of black families in 2002, 3 times more than whites •Many single, black mothers depended on welfare to feed their kids
5.Social Scientists made clear that education excels if the child has warm, home environment •seemed clear that many fatherless, impoverished Black kids seemed plagued by educational handicaps which were difficult to overcome
6.Some segments of Black communities did prosper after the Civil Rights Movement (50s, 60s), although they still had a long trek ahead until they got equality •by 2002, 33% of black families had a $50,000 income (= middle class)
 •Blacks also improved in politics •Number of black officials elected had risen to the 9,000 mark
 •More than 3 dozen members of congress and mayors of some big cities
 •Voter tallies showed that black votes had risen
7.By the early 21st century, blacks had dramatically advanced into higher education •In 2002, 17%of Blacks over 25 had bachelor’s degree
 •The courts still preserved affirmative action in the university admissions

 X. E Pluribus Plures
1.Controversial issues of color and culture also pervaded the realm of ideas in the late 20th
 2.Echoing early 20th Century “cultural pluralist” like Horace Kallen and Randolph Bourne, many people embraced the creed of “multiculturalism” •This stressed the need to preserve and primate, rather than squash racial minorities
3.In 1970s and 80s, the catchword of philosophy was ethnic pride. •People wanted to still keep their identity and culture (eg Latinos and Asians)
 •The old idea of a “melting pot” turned into a colorful “salad bowl”
4.Nation’s classrooms became the heated area for debate •Multiculturalists attacked traditional curriculum and advocated a greater focus on achievements of blacks, Latinos, Asians, Indians
 •In defense, critics said that studies on ethnic differences would destroy American values
 •Census Bureau further advocated the debate when in 2000 it allowed respondents to identify themselves w/ more than one of the six categories: •black •white•Latino•American Indian•Asian•Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander

 XI. The Life of the Mind
1.Despite the mind-sapping chatter of the “boob tube,” Americans in the early 21st century read more, listened to more music, and were better educated than ever before •Colleges awarded some 2.5 million degrees in 2004
 •1 in 4 25-34 year old age group was a 4 year college graduate
2.This spurt of educated people raised the economy
 3.What Americans read said much about the state of US society •Some American authors, concerning the west •Larry McMurtry the small town West and recollected about the end of the cattle drive era in Lonesome Dove (1985)
 •Raymond Carver wrote powerful stories about the working class in the Pacific Northwest
 •Annie Dillard, Ivan Doig, and Jim Harrison re-created the frontier in the same region as Carver
 •David Guterson wrote a moving tale of interracial anxiety and affection in the WWII era in Pacific Northwest in Snow Falling on Cedars (1994)
 •Wallace Stagner produced many works that transcended their original themes like… •Angle of Repose (1971)
 •Crossing to Safety (1987)
•Norman MacLean wrote two unforgettable events about his childhood in Montana, A River Runs Through It (1976) and Young Men and Fire (1992)
•African American Authors •August Wilson retold the history of the blacks in 20th century w/ emphasis on the psychic cost of the northward migration
 •George Wolf explored sobering questions of black identity in his Jelly’s Last Jam (the life story of jazzman “Jelly Roll” Morton)
 •Alice Walker gave fictional voice to the experiences of black women in her hugely popular The Color Purple
 •Toni Morrison wrote a bewitching portrait of maternal affection in Beloved
 •Edward P. Jones inventively rendered the life of a slave-owning black family in his Pulitzer Prize-wining The Known World.
•Indians got recognition, too •N. Scott Momaday won a Pulitzer Prize for his portrayal of Indian life in House Made of Dawn •James Welch wrote movingly about his Blackfoot ancestors in Fools Crow
•Asian American authors flourished as well •Among them was playwright David Hwang, novelist Amy Tan, and essayist Maxine Hong Kingston
•Gish Jen in Mona in the Promise Land guided her readers into the poignant comedy of suburban family relationships that wasn’t uncommon to 2nd-generation Asian Americans

 •Jhumpa Lahiris’ Interpreter of Maladies, explored the sometimes painful relationship between immigrant Indian parents and their American-born kids
•Latino writers included… •Sandra Cisneros drew hoer own life as a Mexican American kid to evoke Latino life in the working-class Chicago in The House on Mango Street

 XII. The American Prospect
1.American spirit pulsed with vitality in the early 21st century, but bug problems continued •Women still fell short of 1st class citizenship
•US society also wanted to find ways to adapt back to the traditional family, but w/ the new realities of women’s work outside the home
•Full equality was till an elusive dream for some races
•Powerful foreign competitors threatened the US economic status
•The alarmingly unequal distribution of wealth and income threatened to turn America into a society of haves and have-nots, mocking the very ideals of democracy
2.Environmental worries clouded the countries future •Coal-fired electrical energy plants produced acid rain and helped greenhouse effect
•Unsolved problem of radioactive waste disposal stopped the making of nuclear power plants
•The planet was being drained of oil and oil spills showed the danger behind oil exploration/transportation
3.The public looks towards alternative fuel sources in the 21st Century: •Solar powers and wind mills
•methane fuel
•electric “hybrid” cars
•the pursuit of an affordable hydrogen fuel cell Energy conservation remained another crucial, but elusive strategy
4.The task of cleansing the earth of abundant pollutants was one urgent mission confronting the US people
5.Another was seeking ways to resolve ethnic and cultural conflicts once erupted around the world’s end of the Cold War
6.All at the same time more doors were opening for the US people •opportunities in outer space and inner-city streets
artist’s easel and the musician’s concert hall at the inventor’s bench and the scientist’s laboratory The unending quest for social justice, individual fulfillment, international peace.

 
Chapter 41

Bill Clinton: the First Baby-Boomer President
1.In 1992, the Democrats chose Bill Clinton as their candidate (despite accusations of womanizing, drug use, and draft evasion) and Albert Gore, Jr. as his running mate.
2.The Democrats tried a new approach, promoting growth, strong defense, and anticrime policies while campaigning to stimulate the economy.
3.The Republicans dwelt on “family values” and selected Bush for another round and J. Danforth Quayle as his running mate. They claimed that “character matters” and so Clinton and his baggage should not be elected.
4.Third party candidate Ross Perot added color to the election by getting 19,742,267 votes in the election (no electoral votes, though), but Clinton won, 370 to 168 in the Electoral College. •Democrats also got control of both the House and the Senate.
5.Congress and the presidential cabinet were filled with minorities and more women, including the first female attorney general ever, Janet Reno, Secretary of Health and Human Services Donna Shalala, and Ruth Bader Ginsburg in the Supreme Court

 A False Start for Reform
1.Upon entering office, Clinton called for accepting homosexuals in the armed forces, but finally had to settle for a “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy that unofficially accepted gays and lesbians.
2.Clinton also appointed his wife, Hillary, to revamp the nation’s health and medical care system, and when it was revealed in October 1993, critics blasted it as cumbersome, confusing, and unpractical, thus suddenly making Hillary Rodham Clinton a liability whereas before, she had been a full, equal political partner of her husband.
3.By 1996, Clinton had shrunk the federal deficit to its lowest level in a decade, and in 1993, he passed a gun-control law called the Brady Bill, named after presidential aide James Brady who had been wounded in President Reagan’s attempted assassination. •In July 1994, Clinton persuaded Congress to pass a $30 billion anticrime bill.
4.During the decade, a radical Muslim group bombed the World Trade Center in New York, killing six. An American terrorist, Timothy McVeigh, bombed the federal building in Oklahoma in 1995, taking 169 lives. And a fiery standoff at Waco, Texas, between the government and the Branch Davidian religious cult ended in a huge fire that killed men, women, and children. •By this time, few Americans trusted the government, the reverse of the WWII generation.

 The Politics of Distrust
1.In 1994, Newt Gingrich led Republicans on a sweeping attack of Clinton’s liberal failures with a conservative “Contract with America,” and that year, Republicans won all incumbent seats as well as eight more seats in the Senate and 53 more seats in the House. Gingrich became the new Speaker of the House.
2.However, the Republicans went too far, imposing federal laws that put new obligations on state and local governments without providing new revenues and forcing Clinton to sign a welfare-reform bill that made deep cuts in welfare grants. •Clinton tried to fight back, but gradually, the American public grew tired of Republican conservatism, such as Gingrich’s suggestion of sending children of welfare families to orphanages, and of its incompetence, such as the 1995 shut down of Congress due to a lack of a sufficient budget package.
3.In 1996, Clinton ran against Republican Bob Dole and won, 379 to 159, and Ross Perot again finished a sorry third.

 Clinton Again
1.Clinton became the first Democrat to be re-elected since FDR.
2.He put conservatives on the defensive by claiming the middle ground. •He embraced the Welfare Reform Bill.
•He balanced affirmative action (preferential treatment for minorities). When voters and courts began to move away from affirmative action, Clinton spoke against the direction away from affirmative action, but stopped short of any action.
3.Mostly, Clinton enjoyed the popularity of a president during an economic good-time. •He supported the controversial NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement) which cut tariffs and trade barriers between Mexico—U.S.—Canada.
•Similarly, he supported the start of the WTO (World Trade Agreement) to lower trade barriers internationally.
4.The issue of campaign finance reform rose to water level. Republicans and Clinton alike, gave the issue lip service, but did nothing.

 Problems Abroad
1.Clinton sent troops to Somalia (where some were killed), withdrew them, and also meddled in Northern Ireland to no good effect. But after denouncing China’s abuses of human rights and threatening to punish China before he became president, Clinton as president discovered that trade with China was too important to throw away over human rights.
2.Clinton committed American troops to NATO to keep the peace in the former Yugoslavia, and he sent 20,000 troops to return Jean-Bertrand Aristide to power in Haiti.
3.He resolutely supported the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) that made a free-trade zone surrounding Mexico, Canada, and the U.S., then helped form the World Trade Organization (WTO), the successor to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), and also provided $20 billion to Mexico in 1995 to help its faltering economy.
4.Clinton also presided over an historic reconciliation meeting in 1993 between Israel’s Yitzhak Rabin and Palestinian Yasir Arafat at the White House, but two years later, Rabin was assassinated, thus ending hopes for peace in the Middle East.

 Scandal and Impeachment
1.The end of the Cold War left the U.S. groping for a diplomatic formula to replace anti-Communism and revealed misconduct by the CIA and the FBI.
2.Political reporter Joe Klein wrote Primary Colors, mirroring some of Clinton’s personal life/womanizing. Meanwhile Clinton also ran into trouble with his failed real estate investment in the Whitewater Land Corporation. •In 1993, Vincent Foster, Jr. apparently committed suicide, perhaps overstressed at having to (perhaps immorally) manage Clinton’s legal and financial affairs. 3.As Clinton began his second term, the first by a Democratic president since FDR, he had Republican majorities in both houses of Congress going against him.
4.Oddly for a president who seemed obsessed with making a place for himself in history, his place likely was made with the infamous Monica Lewinski sex scandal. In it, Clinton had oral sex in the White House Oval Office with the intern Lewinski. Then he denied, under oath, that he had done so, figuring that oral sex was not actually sex. •For his “little white lie,” Clinton was impeached by the House (only the 2nd president to be impeached, behind Andrew Johnson right after the Civil War).
•However, Republicans were unable to get the necessary 2/3 super-majority vote in the Senate to kick Clinton from the White House. So, Clinton fulfilled his final years as president, but did so with a tarnished image and his place in history assured. His actions saw Americans lean toward the realization that character indeed must really matter after all.

 Clinton’s Legacy
1.In his last several months as president, Clinton tried to secure a non-Monica legacy. •He named tracts of land as preservations.
•He initiated a “patients’ bill of rights.”
•He hired more teachers and police officers.
2.On the good side, Clinton proved to be a largely moderate Democrat. The economy was strong, the budget was balanced, and he cautioned people from expected big-government from being the do-all and give-all to everyone.
3.On the bad side, the Monica Lewinski situation created great cynicism in politics, he negotiated a deal with the Lewinski prosecutor where he’d gave immunity in exchange for a fine and law license suspension, and his last-minute executive pardons gave the appearance of rewarding political donors.

 The Bush-Gore Presidential Battle
1.The 2000 election began to shape up as a colorful one. •Democrats chose Vice President Albert Gore. He had to balance aligned with Clinton’s prosperity and against his scandals.
•The Green Party (consisting mostly of liberals and environmentalists) chose consumer advocate Ralph Nader.
•Republicans chose Texas governor George W. Bush (son of George H. W. Bush and known simply as “W” or, in Texas, as “Dub-ya”).
2.A budget surplus beckoned the question, “What to do with the extra money?” •Bush said to make big cut taxes for all.
•Gore said to make smaller tax cuts to the middle class only, then use the rest to shore up the debt, Social Security, and Medicare.
•Nader, in reality, was little more than a side-show.

 The Controversial Election of 2000
1.A close finish was expected, but not to the degree to which it actually happened. •The confused finish was reminiscent of the Hayes-Tilden standoff of 1876.
2.Controversy surrounded Florida. •Having the nation’s 4th most electoral votes, Florida was the swing-state.
•Florida effectively had a tie, with Bush ahead by the slightest of margins.
•State law required a recount. •The recount upheld Bush’s narrow win.
•Democrats charged there were irregularities in key counties (notably Palm Beach county that had a large Jewish populace and therefore would figure to be highly Democratic in support of Gore’s V.P. candidate Joseph Lieberman, the 1st Jewish candidate for president or V.P.).
•At heart of the matter was the infamous “butterfly ballot” which supposedly confused the easily-confounded elderly of Palm Beach county—supposedly to Bush’s advantage.
•As the confusion wore on and America needed a president A.S.A.P., Florida eventually validated the Bush vote. Additionally, George W.’s brother Jeb Bush was the Florida governor; and, the Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris, who officially validated the Bush-vote, had been appointed by Jeb. •For conspiracy theorists, it was like a field-day on Christmas morning.
•One irony of the election was the role of Ralph Nader. He energized the liberalist liberals (and therefore those who disliked Bush the most). The irony: Green votes for Nader stole votes that would’ve gone to Gore and ostensibly gave the election to Bush.
•Drama aside, Bush won. Gore actually got more popular votes (50,999,897 to Bush’s 50,456,002), but lost the critical electoral vote (266 to Bush’s 271).

 Bush Begins
1.Bush took office talking up his Texas upbringing (true) and talking down his family’s Back-East privilege (also true).
2.Bush took on hot topics and fired up both sides of the political spectrum. •He withdrew U.S. support from international programs that okayed abortion.
•He advocated faith-based social welfare programs.
•He opposed stem-cell research, which had great medical possibilities, on the grounds that the embryo in reality was a small person and doing tests on it was nothing other than abortion.
•He angered environmentalists with his policies.
 •He even worried conservatives by cutting taxes $1.3 trillion. The budget surpluses of the 90s turned into a $400 billion deficit by 2004.

 Terrorism Comes to America
1.On September 11, 2001, America’s centuries-old enjoyment of being on “our side of the pond” ended when militant Muslim radicals attacked America. The radicals hijacked passenger planes and used the planes, and hostages, as guided missiles. •Two planes slammed into the World Trade Center towers in New York City. The towers caught afire, then came down.
•A third plane slammed into the Pentagon.
•A fourth plane was aiming for the White House, but heroic passengers took back the plane before it crashed in a Pennsylvania field.
2.America was stunned, to say the least.
3.President Bush’s leadership after the attacks was solemn and many began to forget the disputed election of 2000. •He identified the culprits as Al Qaeda, a religious militant terrorist group, led by Osama Bin Laden.
•Bin Laden’s hatred toward America revolved around resent of America’s economic, military, and cultural power.
4.Texas-style, Bush called for Bin Laden’s head. Afghanistan refused to hand him over so Bush ordered the military to go on the offensive and hunt him down. The hunt proved to be difficult and Bin Laden proved elusive.
5.At the same time, the American economy turned for the worse, and a few Americans died after receiving anthrax-laden letters. Coupled with fear of another attack, anxiety loomed.
6.Terrorism launched a “new kind of war” or a “war on terror” that required tactics beyond the conventional battlefield. Congress responded in turn. •The Patriot Act gave the government extended surveillance rights. Critics charged this was a Big Brother-like infringement of rights—a reversal of the freedoms that Americans were fighting for.
•The Department of Homeland Security was established as the newest cabinet department. It’s goal was to secure America.

 Bush Takes the Offensive Against Iraq
1.Saddam Hussein had been a long time menace to many people. With Bush, his time had run out. Bush stated he’d not tolerate Hussein’s defiance of the U.N.’s weapons inspectors.
2.At heart of problems: intelligence at the time suggested that Hussein had and was actively making weapons of mass destruction (“WMDs”). Hussein continually thumbed his nose at the weapon’s inspectors who tried to validate or disprove the threat.
3.Bush decided it was time for action. •Bush sought the U.N.’s approval for taking military action, but some nations, notably France with its Security Council veto, had cold feet.
•So, Bush decided to go it alone. Heavy majorities of Congress in October of 2002 approved armed force against Iraq.
•The U.N. tried one last time to inspect, Hussein blocked the inspectors again. The U.N. and inspectors asked for more time still.
•For Bush, time was up. He launched an attack and Baghdad fell within a month. Saddam went on the run, then was found nine months later hiding in a hole in the ground.
•Taking Iraq, though not easy, was swift and successful; securing and rebuilding Iraq would prove tougher.

 Owning Iraq
1.Most Iraqi people welcomed the Americans, but certainly not all.
2.Factions broke out. Iraqi insurgents attacked American G.I.’s and casualties mounted to nearly 1,200 by 2004.
3.Americans soon began to wonder, “How long will we be there?”
4.The new goals were to (1) establish security in Iraq, hopefully by Iraqi troops, and (2) create and turn over control to a new democratically elected Iraqi government. •Training Iraqi troops proved pitifully slow.
•A new government was created and limited power handed over on June 28, 2004.
5.Iraq became a divisive issue in America. Conservatives generally supported the war and post-war efforts. Liberals charged that Bush was on some ego-tripping battle charge to hunt down phantom weapons of mass destruction.

 A Country in Conflict
1.Other issues divided America: •Democrats continually grumbled about the “stolen” 2000 election.
•Civil libertarians fumed over the Patriot Act.
•Pacifists said the WMD reasoning was made up from the get-go to start a war.
•Big business (like Enron and WorldCom that monkeyed with their books) supposedly fattened the rich and gleaned the poor.
•Social warfare continued over abortion and homosexuality.
•Affirmative action still boiled, and the Supreme Court came up with mathematical formulae for minority admittance to undergrads. The Court also stated that in 25 years racial preferences would likely be unnecessary.

 Reelecting George W. Bush
1.Republicans put Bush up for reelection in 2004.
2.Democrats selected Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts.
3.Despite the usual litany of issues (education, health care, etc.) the key issue of the 2004 election was national security. •At the heart of the security issue, was the question of the war in Iraq.
•Bush said to “stay the course”; Kerry took an anti-war position. However, Kerry’s position and image was somewhat confounding: •Kerry was a Vietnam war hero, but then a Vietnam war protestor.
•Kerry voted for military action in Iraq, but then voted against a bill for military spending for the war.
4.Kerry gained much support by criticizing Bush’s management (or mismanagement) of the Iraq situation. Kerry charged that Bush had no plan for Iraq after the initial take-over. However, Kerry focused only on Bush’s failure and failed to effectively present voters with his own alternative course of action.
5.In the election, and despite polls to the contrary, Bush won with a surprisingly strong showing (a popular vote of 60,639,281 to Kerry’s 57,355,978) of 286 electoral votes to Kerry’s 252.
Chapter 40
 The Reagan Revolution
1.Reagan’s inauguration day coincided with the release by the Iranians of their U.S. hostages, and Reagan also assembled a cabinet of the “best and brightest,” including Secretary of the Interior James Watt, a controversial man with little regard to the environment. •Watt tried to hobble the Environmental Protection Agency and permit oil drilling in scenic places, but finally had to resign after telling an insulting ethnic joke in public.
2.For over two decades, the government budget had slowly and steadily risen, much to the disturbance of the tax-paying public. By the 1980s, the public was tired of the New Deal and the Great Society programs’s costs and were ready to slash bills, just as Reagan proposed. •His federal budget had cuts of some $35 billion, and he even wooed some Southern Democrats to abandon their own party and follow him.
•But on March 30, 1981, the president was shot and wounded by a deranged John Hinckley. He recovered in only twelve days, showing his devotion to physical fitness despite his age (near 70) and gaining massive sympathy and support.

 The Battle of the Budget
1.Reagan’s budget was $695 billion with a $38 billion deficit. He planned cuts, and vast majority of budget cuts fell upon social programs, not on defense, but there were also sweeping tax cuts of 25% over three years. •The president appeared on national TV pleading for passage of the new tax-cut bill, and bolstered by “boll weevils,” or Democrats who defected to the Republican side, Congress passed it.
•The bill used “supply side economics” or “Reaganomics” (policies favorable to businesses) to lower individual taxes, almost eliminate federal estate taxes, and create new tax-free savings plans for small investors.
However, this theory backfired as the nation slid into its worst recession since the Great Depression, with unemployment reaching nearly 11% in 1982 and several banks failing. •Critics (Democrats) yapped that Reagan’s programs and tax cuts had caused this mayhem, but in reality, it had been Carter’s “tight money” policies that had led to the recession, and Reagan and his advisors sat out the storm, waiting for a recovery that seemed to come in 1983.
3.However, during the 1980s, income gaps widened between the rich and poor for the first time in the 20th century (this was mirrored by the emergence of “yuppies”—Young Urban Professionals, very materialistic professionals). And it was massive military spending (a $100 billion annual deficit in 1982 and nearly $200 million annual deficits in the later years) that upped the American dollar. The trade deficit, also rose to a record $152 billion in 1987. These facts helped make America the world’s biggest borrowers.

 Reagan Renews the Cold War
1.Reagan took a get-tough stance against the USSR, especially when they continued to invade Afghanistan, and his plan to defeat the Soviets was to wage a super-expensive arms race that would eventually force the Soviets into bankruptcy and render them powerless. •He began this with his Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), popularly known as “Star Wars,” which proposed a system of lasers that could fire from space and destroy any nuclear weapons fired by Moscow before they hit America—a system that many experts considered impossible as well as upsetting to the “balance of terror” (don’t fire for fear of retaliation) that had kept nuclear war from being unleashed all these years. SDI was never built.
2.Late in 1981, the Soviets clamped down on Poland’s massive union called “Solidarity” and received economic sanctions from the U.S. •The deaths of three different aging Soviet oligarchs from 1982-85 and the breaking of all arms-control negotiations in 1983 further complicated dealings with the Soviets.

 Troubles Abroad
1.Israel invaded Lebanon in 1982 to destroy guerilla bases, and the next year, Reagan sent U.S. forces as part of an international peace-keeping force. But, when a suicide bomber crashed a bomb-filled truck into U.S. Marine barracks on October 23, 1983 killing over 200 marines, Reagan had to withdraw the troops, though he miraculously suffered no political damage. •Afterwards, he became known as the “Teflon president,” the president to which nothing harmful would stick.
2.Reagan accused Nicaraguan “Sandinistas,” a group of leftists that had taken over the Nicaraguan government, of turning the country into a forward base from which Communist forces could invade and conquer all of Latin America. •He also accused them of helping revolutionary forces in El Salvador, where violence had reigned since 1979, and Reagan then helped “contra” rebels in Nicaragua fight against the Sandinistas.
•In October 1983, Reagan sent troops to Grenada, where a military coup had killed the prime minister and brought communists to power. The U.S. crushed the communist rebels.

 Round Two for Reagan
1.Reagan was opposed by Democrat Walter Mondale and V.P. candidate Geraldine Ferraro, the first woman to appear on a major-party presidential ticket, but won handily.
2.Foreign policy issues dominated Reagan’s second term, one that saw the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev, a personable, energetic leader who announced two new Soviet policies: glasnost, or “openness,” which aimed to introduce free speech and political liberty to the Soviet Union, and perestroika, or “restructuring,” which meant that the Soviets would move toward adopting free-market economies similar to those in the West.
3.At a summit meeting at Geneva in 1985, Gorbachev introduced the idea of ceasing the deployment of intermediate-range nuclear forces (INF). At a second meeting at Reykjavik, Iceland, in November 1985, there was stalemate. At the third one in Washington D.C., the treaty was finally signed, banning all INF’s from Europe. •The final summit at Moscow saw Reagan warmly praising the Soviet chief for trying to end the Cold War.
4.Also, Reagan supported Corazon Aquino’s ousting of Filipino dictator, Ferdinand Marcos.
5.He also ordered a lightning raid on Libya, in 1986, in retaliation for Libya’s state-sponsored terrorist attacks, and began escorting oil tankers through the Persian Gulf during the Iran—Iraq War.

 The Iran-Contra Imbroglio
1.In November 1986, it was revealed that a year before, American diplomats led by Col. Olive North had secretly arranged arms sales to Iranian diplomats in return for the release of American hostages (at least one was) and had used that money to aid Nicaraguan contra rebels. •This brazenly violated the congressional ban on helping Nicaraguan rebels, not to mention Reagan’s personal vow not to negotiate with terrorists.
•An investigation concluded that even if Reagan had no knowledge of such events, as he claimed, he should have. This scandal not only cast a dark cloud over Reagan’s foreign policy success, but also brought out a picture of Reagan as a somewhat senile old man who slept through important cabinet meetings. •Still, Reagan remained ever popular.

 Reagan’s Economic Legacy
1.Supply-side economics claimed that cutting taxes would actually increase government revenue, but instead, during his eight years in office, Reagan accumulated a $2 trillion debt—more than all his presidential predecessors combined. •Much of the debt was financed by foreign bankers like the Japanese, creating fear that future Americans would have to work harder or have lower standards of living to pay off such debts for the United States.
2.Reagan did triumph in containing the welfare state by incurring debts so large that future spending would be difficult, thus prevent any more welfare programs from being enacted successfully.
3.Another trend of “Reaganomics” was the widening of the gap between the rich and the poor. The idea of “trickle-down economics” (helping the rich who own business would see money trickle down to working classes) seemed to prove false.

The Religious Right
1.Beginning in the 1980s, energized religious conservatives began to exert their political muscle in a cultural war. •Rev. Jerry Falwell started the Moral Majority, consisting of evangelical Christians.
•2-3 million registered as Moral Majority voters in its first two years.
•Using the power of media, they opposed sexual permissiveness, abortion, feminism, and homosexuality.
2.In large part, the conservative movement of the 80s was an answer to the liberal movement of the 60s. The pendulum was swinging back. •Conservatives viewed America as being hijacked in the 60s by a minority of radicals with political aims; the conservatives saw themselves as taking back America.

 Conservatism in the Courts
1.Reagan used the courts as his instrument against affirmative action and abortion, and by 1988, the year he left office, he had appointed a near-majority of all sitting federal judges. •Included among those were three conservative-minded judges, one of which was Sandra Day O’Connor, a brilliant Stanford Law School graduate and the first female Supreme Court justice in American history.
2.In a 1984 case involving Memphis firefighters, the Court ruled that union rules about job seniority could outweigh affirmative-action concerns.
3.In Ward’s Cove Packing v. Arizona and Martin v. Wilks, the Court ruled it more difficult to prove that an employer practiced discrimination in hiring and made it easier for white males to argue that they were victims of reverse-discrimination.
4.The 1973 case of Roe v. Wade had basically legalized abortion, but the 1989 case of Webster v. Reproductive Health Services seriously compromised protection of abortion rights. •In Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992), the Court ruled that states could restrict access to abortion as long as they didn’t place an “undue burden” on the woman.

 Referendum on Reaganism in 1988
1.Democrats got back the Senate in 1986 and sought to harm Reagan with the Iran-Contra scandal and unethical behavior that tainted an oddly large number of Reagan’s cabinet. •They even rejected Robert Bork, Reagan’s ultraconservative choice to fill an empty space on the Supreme Court.
2.The federal budget and the international trade deficit continued to soar while falling oil prices hurt housing values in the Southwest and damaged savings-and-loans institutions, forcing Reagan to order a $500 million rescue operation for the S&L institutions. •On October 19, 1987, the stock market fell 508 points, sparking fears of the end of the money culture, but this was premature.
3.In 1988, Gary Hart tried to get the Democratic nomination but had to drop out due to a sexual misconduct charge while Jesse Jackson assembled a “rainbow coalition” in hopes of becoming president. But, the Democrats finally chose Michael Dukakis, who lost badly to Republican candidate and Reagan’s vice president George Herbert Walker Bush, 112 to 426.

 George H. W. Bush and the End of the Cold War
1.Bush had been born into a rich family, but he was committed to public service and vowed to sculpt “a kindler, gentler America.”
2.In 1989, it seemed that Democracy was reviving in previously Communist hot-spots. •In China, thousands of democratic-seeking students protested in Tiananmen Square but they were brutally crushed by Chinese tanks and armed forces.
•In Eastern Europe, Communist regimes fell in Poland (which saw Solidarity rise again), Hungary, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, and Romania. •Soon afterwards, the Berlin Wall came tumbling down.
•In 1990, Boris Yeltsin stopped a military coup that tried to dislodge Gorbachev, then took over Russia when the Soviet Union fell and disintegrated into the Commonwealth of Independent States, of which Russia was the largest member. Thus, the Cold War was over. •This shocked experts who had predicted that the Cold War could only end violently.
3.Problems remained however, as the question remained of who would take over the U.S.S.R.’s nuclear stockpiles or its seat in the U.N. Security Council? Eventually, Russia did.
4.In 1993, Bush signed the START II accord with Yeltsin, pledging both nations to reduce their long-range nuclear arsenals by two-thirds within ten years. •Trouble was still present when the Chechnyen minority in Russia tried to declare independence and was resisted by Russia; that incident hasn’t been resolved yet.
5.Europe found itself quite unstable when the economically weak former communist countries re-integrated with it.
6.America then had no rival to guard against, and it was possible that it would revert back to its isolationist policies. Also, military spending had soaked up so much money that upon the end of the Cold War, the Pentagon closed 34 military bases, canceled a $52 billion order for a navy attack plane, and forced scores of Californian defense plants to shut their doors. 7.However, in 1990, South Africa freed Nelson Mandela, and he was elected president 4 years later. 1.Free elections removed the Sandinistas in Nicaragua in 1990, and in 1992, peace came to Ecuador at last.

The Persian Gulf Crisis
1.On August 2, 1990, Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein invaded oil-rich Kuwait with 100,000 men, hoping to annex it as a 19th province and use its oil fields to replenish debts incurred during the Iraq—Iran War, a war which oddly saw the U.S. supporting Hussein despite his bad reputation.
2.Saddam attacked swiftly, but the U.N. responded just as swiftly, placing economic embargoes on the aggressor and preparing for military punishment.
3.Fighting “Operation Desert Storm” •Some 539,000 U.S. military force members joined 270,000 troops from 28 other countries to attack Iraq in a war, which began on January 12, 1991, when Congress declared it. •On January 16, the U.S. and U.N. unleashed a hellish air war against Iraq for 37 days.
•Iraq responded by launching several ultimately ineffective “scud” missiles at Saudi Arabia and Israel, but it had far darker strategies available, such as biological and chemical weapons and strong desert fortifications with oil-filled moats that could be lit afire if the enemy got too close.
•American General Norman Schwarzkopf took nothing for granted, strategizing to suffocate Iraqis with an onslaught of air bombing raids and then rush them with troops. •On February 23, “Operation Desert Storm” began with an overwhelming land attack that lasted four days, saw really little casualties, and ended with Saddam’s forces surrender.
•American cheered the war’s rapid end and well-fought duration and was relieved that this had not turned into another Vietnam, but Saddam Hussein had failed to be dislodged from power and was left to menace the world another day.
4.The U.S. found itself even more deeply ensnared in the region’s web of mortal hatreds.

 Bush on the Home Front
1.President Bush’s 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act was a landmark law that banned discrimination against citizens with disabilities.
2.Bush also signed a major water projects bill in 1992 and agreed to sign a watered-down civil rights bill in 1991.
3.In 1991, Bush proposed Clarence Thomas (a Black man) to fill in the vacant seat left by retiring Thurgood Marshall (the first Black Supreme Court justice), but this choice was opposed by the NAACP since Thomas was a conservative and by the National Organization for Women (NOW), since Thomas was supposedly pro-abortion. •In early October 1991, Anita Hill charged Thomas with sexual harassment, and even though Thomas was still selected to be on the Court, Hill’s case publicized sexual harassment and tightened tolerance of it (Oregon’s Senator Robert Packwood had to step down in 1995 after a case of sexual harassment).
•A gender gap arose between women in both parties.
4.In 1992, the economy stalled, and Bush was forced to break an explicit campaign promise (“Read my lips, no new taxes”) and add $133 billion worth of new taxes to try to curb the $250 billion annual budget. •When it was revealed that many House members had written bad checks from a private House “bank,” public confidence lessened even more.
5.The 27th Amendment banned congressional pay raises from taking effect until an election had seated a new session of Congress, an idea first proposed by James Madison in 1789.