Exam 5 Flashcards

1
Q

Who wrote the Cross of Gold speech?

A

William Jennings Bryan

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2
Q

What was the conflict with the Cross of Gold speech?

A

Whether to switch over to the gold standard or bimetallism

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3
Q

Did William Jennings Bryan support bimetallism or the gold standard?

A

bimetallism

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4
Q

Did William Jennings Bryan support the income tax?

A

Yes

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5
Q

Did William Jennings Bryan believe the government had a right to coin and issue $?

A

Yes

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6
Q

Did William Jennings Bryan say the government needed to stay out of the bank’s matters?

A

No, he said the bank needed to stay out of government matters

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7
Q

What did William Jennings Bryan say Americal will do if England declares support for the gold standard?

A

Fight it

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8
Q

Who wrote “The Jungle?”

A

Upton Sinclair

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9
Q

What did Upton Sinclair write about? What did this lead to?

A

Poor conditions of meat packing industry, 1st pure food act

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10
Q

What was the problem with the government in “The Jungle”?

A

It was bribable

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11
Q

What were some issues in “The Jungle”?

A

Poor sanitation, occupational hazards, bribing people to abolish inspections

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12
Q

How were workers treated in “The Jungle?

A

Very poorly, worked to the bone. Corp tries to get as much $$$ as possible out of them

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13
Q

What solution did Upton Sinclair propose in “The Jungle?”

A

Socialism

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14
Q

Who wrote “A living wage”?

A

Monsignor John Ryan

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15
Q

What did Monsignor John Ryan say about the Catholic doctrine?

A

It required each person to be paid fairly for their work

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16
Q

Did Monsignor John Ryan see poverty as a systemic problem?

A

Yes

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17
Q

Who did Monsignor John Ryan believe should handle poverty? How?

A

The state should work to provide suitable economic conditions by enforcing a reasonable minimum standard of living and livelihood

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18
Q

Did Monsignor John Ryan support a minimum wage? What about working hours?

A

Yes, no more hours than is morally or materially healthy

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19
Q

How did Monsignor John Ryan feel about women and children working?

A

(Edit: Women?)They shouldn’t work

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20
Q

Who did Monsignor John Ryan say should provide the circumstances workers need to be secure in their savings and insurance? Who should make up the difference they can’t provide for themselves?

A

The state

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21
Q

Did Monsignor John Ryan believe the state should totally take over charitable matters?

A

No, but to supplement what charities are already doing. Don’t take over things if you can’t do them better

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22
Q

Who wrote Christianity and the Social Crisis?

A

Walter Rouschenbusch

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23
Q

What did Rouschenbusch say about the church?

A

He said it should work with the state to transform humanity into the kingdom of God

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24
Q

How did Rouschenbusch say people are treated in the workforce?

A

As things, not people

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25
Q

Did Rouschenbusch believe industries promoted virtue?

A

No

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26
Q

What did Rouschenbusch believe the workforce needed to focus on more?

A

Promoting and protecting families, individuals, and a Christian life

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27
Q

What did Rouschenbusch say about how the political economy taught us to look at how to approach questions?

A

From the POV of goods, not man

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28
Q

What did Rouschenbusch say our priorities should be in the political economy?

A

Other people

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29
Q

What type of political economy did Rouschenbusch support?

A

A socialistic one

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30
Q

What did progressivist reforms try to do?

A

Adress inequality and injustice (eg wealth)

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31
Q

Was Upton Sinclair a progressivist?

A

Yes

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32
Q

Why was there such severe poverty in progressivist times?

A

Low wages

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33
Q

Who were the populists?

A

Mostly farmers who felt like they’d been screwed over by the new economic system

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34
Q

Why was populism created?

A

Because of new economic conditions

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35
Q

Could populism have been considered a revolt? If so, against who?

A

Yes, against the elited who were screwing them over

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36
Q

What did the “Cross of Gold” speech focus on?

A

Organized wealth screwing over the little people and benefitting the farmers

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37
Q

Was William Jennings a populist?

A

Yes

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38
Q

Who were progressivists?

A

Mostly educated, middle class people from small towns and growing cities

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39
Q

Who did William Jennigns have similar principles to?

A

Andrew Jackson

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40
Q

Were the progressivists anti-elite?

A

Yes, but to a lesser degree than the populists

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41
Q

Were populists and progressivists similar?

A

Yes, but progressivists were from urban/town dwelling bases

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42
Q

What were progressivists concerned about with the elites?

A

A shrinking middle class

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43
Q

What did populism and progressivism have in common?

A

They both had religious rhetoric and were led by religious readers

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44
Q

What were the goals of progressivism?

A

To change the system that screwed people over, correct abuses and understand the requirements for democracies

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45
Q

What were progressivists concerned with?

A

Checks and balances being inefficient and causing confusion and irresponsibility

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46
Q

What type of government did Woodrow Wilson call for?

A

A unified parliamentary

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47
Q

What does the current government look like? Why could this be a good thing, and who says that?

A

Whoever is elected is in charge of making laws, which federalists say is good because of deliberation

48
Q

Who says the current government could be bad, and why?

A

Progressivists, nothing gets done and no one knows who to blame

49
Q

Were the progressivists successful?

A

No

50
Q

How did the founders set up standards? Why did progressivists want to change it?

A

Hands off so people can compete, progressives say it didn’t work because competition has changes

51
Q

Who did progressivists think should have a lot of power in government?

A

Experts

52
Q

Why do we have experts in government?

A

State and national legislators can’t be trusted

53
Q

Did progressivism lead to more or less democracy?

A

More

54
Q

Who wrote The Promise of American Life?

A

Herbert Croly

55
Q

What does Herbert Croly say we put too much emphasis on? What should we focus on instead?

A

individual freedom from government and equal rights
Should be more concerned about people advocating for themselves as a whole and helping out gvmt

56
Q

What did Herbert Croly say we should think of gvmt in terms of?

A

what government can’t do, not what it can so it can be empowered

57
Q

Why was William Jennings Bryan more concerned about populism? Why was it more popular?

A

It affected a much larger part of the population

58
Q

What was Rauschenbusch’s philosophy on our priorities as a society?

A

Says we should stop with materialism and focus on spirituality and that a society focused on materialism is structured incorrectly

59
Q

How did Croly say we should handle inequality?

A

The government should try to level out the playing field

60
Q

How could checks and balances affect speed of legislation?

A

Government designed to achieve reasonable policies, but checks and balances keeps this from happening quickly

61
Q

What are Progressives wanting from gvmt? that will be able to enact policy quickly, like Britain’s parliamentary system. Once someone is elected, they enact all their policies

A

Quick action

62
Q

How do supreme court cases rule?

A

whether they have the authority to do something, not whether something is morally right

63
Q

How do cases come up in the supreme court?

A

Someone has to bring the case to court for there to be a case

64
Q

What happened in Lochner v New York? Why was this illegal?

A

Lochner fined for allowing his employees (bakers) to work more than 60 hours a week

Employers are taking advantage of employees, demand they work more than they should

65
Q

What was the Question for Lochner v New York?

A

Is there a contract between employer and employee that the state can’t get involved in?

66
Q

What type of question did Lochner v New York raise?

A

A state police power case

67
Q

Why did Holmes disagree with the ruling?

A

(EDIT: Double check) It was based on an outdated economic theory

68
Q

What happened to cause Wickard v Filburn?

A

Wickard v Filburn: The agricultural act of 1938 allows the secretary of agriculture (wickard) to set national acreage allotments for wheat to stabilize agricultural production. Filburn plants 23 instead of allotted 11 to feed his livestock and family with the rest. Harvests way more wheat than he’s allowed, fined for excess. Refuses to pay, complained legislation violates commerce clause because he’s not selling it.

69
Q

What was the question in Wickard V filburn?

A

Does the application of the Agricultural adjustment act of 1938 to Mr. Filburn violate the commerce clause as long as he doesn’t intend to sell the wheat and put it into the stream of commerce?

70
Q

What was the ruling in Wickard V Filburn?

A

They can fine him because growing and not buying wheat affects the flow of commerce

71
Q

What was the ruling for Lochner V New York?

A

There’s a contract between employer and employee the government can’t get involved in. 14th amendment prevents interference of contract

72
Q

What was happening around the time of progressivism, populism, and the new deal?

A

A new economy that was screwing people over

73
Q

Did Croly believe we all started out as equals? How did a belief in equal rights affect society as a whole?

A

No, some people have advantages like wealth and education. Believing we had equal rights meant that we weren’t working towards equal rights

74
Q

Why did progressivism fail? How did FDR counter this?

A

They didn’t care a whole lot about individual rights, which FDR expanded on. Right to life –> Right to comfortable living, etc

75
Q

Were populists focused on rural or urban equality?

A

Both

76
Q

What kinds of rights did progressivists want to focus more on?

A

Democratic

77
Q

What did the supreme court rule in Wickard V Filburn?

A

Says congress can basically do whatever as long as it’s related to commerce

78
Q

What did FDR’s plan center on?

A

Equal opportunity, government efforts, and a national coordinated effort instead of letting people fix the problem themselves

79
Q

What did FDR do to combat inequality? What did this mean the government was obligated to do?

A

Created 2nd bill of rights, which expanded on out basic ones (life, liberty, pursuit of happiness)

Provide people with the means to have a good life

80
Q

What happened to cause Hammer v Dagenhart?

A

Federal Child Labor act says you can’t ship interstate commerce goods if you employ children under 14, and a father claimed this was unconstitutional

81
Q

What was the question in Hammer v Dagenhart?

A

Does Congress’ constitutional power to regulate commerce give it the power to pass this act?

82
Q

What was the ruling in Hammer v Dagenhart?

A

Congress doesn’t have the authority to restrict child labor across interstate commerce, because that falls under state authority.

83
Q

How does Croly say we should think about government?

A

as a means to empower us to deal with problems

84
Q

What is the National Labor Relations board?

A

NRLB is a group meant to prevent unfair labor practices

85
Q

What was the precedence for National Labor Relations board vs Jones and Laughlin Steel corporation?

A

Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation fired people who joined union, NLRB said Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation had to reinstate them because they’d been fired unlawfully.

86
Q

What was the question asked during for National Labor Relations board vs Jones and Laughlin Steel corporation?

A

Does Congress have the Constitutional power necessary under the commerce clause to enact the National Labor Relations act (Wagner Act)?

87
Q

What was the ruling for National Labor Relations board vs Jones and Laughlin Steel corporation?

A

It does, because unfair labor practices will affect the flow of commerce which means congress has the power to regulate them. Congress has power over things that affect interstate commerce, even if they’re intrastate.

88
Q

Did Hammer V Dagenhart rule Congress can regulate intrastate activity if it affects interstate commerce?

A

Yes

89
Q

Who wrote the speech at Oglethorpe?

A

FDR

90
Q

How did FDR adress the previous way of living’s economic situation relative to the time of speaking?

A

Very easy

91
Q

What did FDR hope young people would do in his speech at Oglethorpe?

A

Look at the present with greater clarity than previous generations

92
Q

What did FDR criticize in his speech at Oglethorpe?

A

The lack of foresight as a whole in industries and failure to measure

93
Q

Does FDR believe we can fix the depression?

A

Yes, but it’ll take time

94
Q

Does FDR think resources and people are well organized?

A

No

95
Q

What did FDR think the basic problem with the economy was?

A

Unequal distribution of wealth and too much being produced

96
Q

How did FDR think we were going to shift in economic thought in the future?

A

We would think more about the consumer and less about the producer

97
Q

Who wrote the Commonwealth Club speech?

A

FDR

98
Q

Who wrote The 4 Freedoms?

A

FDR

99
Q

Who wrote A Second Bill of Rights?

A

FDR

100
Q

Who Wrote The Need for Cabinet Government?

A

Woodrow Wilson

101
Q

What was the issue in the Commonwealth speech?

A

economy had left golden age, we need to make national effort to fix things

102
Q

Does government exist to serve individuals or do individuals exist to serve gvmt? Where is this stated?

A

Debatable- it’s not for anyone to say, and we’ll disagree on it forever
COmmonwealth speech

103
Q

How did FDR describe the founders of National Government?

A

Ruthless

104
Q

What was the objective of the 4 freedoms?

A

They were freedoms/goals FDR believed all men should have

105
Q

What were the 4 freedoms?

A

Freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, freedom from fear

106
Q

Why did FDR give the 4 freedoms speech?

A

The speech was intended to rally the American people against the Axis threat and to shift favor in support of assisting British and Allied troops.

107
Q

Why did FDR support a second bill of amendments?

A

The first bill hadn’t provided for people’s equality

108
Q

What did FDR say about the importance of the people’s economic rights?

A

Roosevelt stated that having such rights would guarantee American security and that the United States’ place in the world depended upon how far the rights had been carried into practice.

109
Q

What was Woodrow Wilson’s complaint about the process of overturning bills?

A
  • Impossible to overturn bills once they’ve been passed unless HOR stops it, HOR doesn’t allow for much individual discussion
110
Q

Did Woodrow Wilson think HOR and Congress were capable of getting anything done?

A

No

111
Q

What did Woodrow Wilson say about representative government?

A

Best representative gvmt allows peoplw to freely govern themselves, and should legislate in the way it would if the whole country would in its presence

112
Q

What did Woodrow Wilson say about government committees?

A

Says gvmt committees irresponsible, have almost absolute power that is poorly controlled

113
Q

What complaint did Woodrow Wilson have about HOR and Congress working together to create laws?

A

While HOR and Congress seem like they’d work very well, they prevent the people from being able to express themselves in government

114
Q

Why did Woodrow Wilson publish Cabinet Government in the United States? What was the reason behid the main issue?

A

calling for a much closer relationship between the legislative and executive branches than was permitted by the Constitution

115
Q

Why didn’t Woodrow Wilson like committee gvmt?

A

It discouraged open discussion

116
Q

Why didn’t Woodrow Wilson like how Congress created laws?

A

They were secret

117
Q

What kind of government did Wilson want?

A

cabinet-style system that would allow the legislature to engage in real debate that would engage and educate the public, similar to how the British parliament works today.