The Roaring 20s: A Clash of Values

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The Roaring 20s: A Clash of Values. Ch 7.1. DISCUSSION QUESTIONS. What is a recession? Do economic recessions increase feelings of Nativism against immigrants?. Monday , March 19, 2012. Understand the different clashes of values in the 1920s. Nativism v Immigration. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Roaring 20s: A Clash of ValuesCh 7.1

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS•What is a recession?•Do economic recessions increase feelings

of Nativism against immigrants?

Monday, March 19, 2012•Understand the different clashes of values

in the 1920s.

Nativism v Immigration•In the early 1920s economic recession,

increased immigration, racial and cultural tensions led to a new rise of Nativism.

•Eugenics supported the Nativism movement and a new Ku Klux Klan (KKK) targeted "un-American“ groups like Catholics, Jews.

Sacco and Vanzetti•Two Italian anarchists immigrants were

accused of murder and found guilty with little evidence.

•An example of prejudice based on political beliefs and ethnicity.

Controlling Immigration•The Emergency Quota Act limited

immigration to 3% of the population already in the US from that country.

•It limited immigration from “undesirable” places.

•The National Origins Act of 1924 which further tightens these restrictions targeted at South and Eastern Europeans and Asians.

Hispanic Immigration•The Immigration laws excluded limits

from Latin America.•Many Mexicans and other Latin

Americans filled the labor shortage.

Discussion Questions•Prohibition-banning/stopping the sale and

use of something.•Prohibition exists today!•Come up with a current example of

prohibition.•The goal of prohibition is to get people to

stop using the illegal substance.• Is prohibition working today?• If people continue to use something

illegally despite prohibition, where do they get it from?

•“I am like any other man. All I do is supply a demand.”-Al Capone

Prohibition•The 18th Amendment made the sale and

manufacture of Alcohol illegal.•The Volstead Act gave the gov’t the

police powers to enforce prohibition.•Underground Bars became Speakeasies

were they sold illegal liquor.

The Simpsons! Homer v 18th Amendment • In this episode Springfield suffers from a crisis

of conscience because of rampant alcoholism in the city.

• The religious people in the town begin a prohibition movement to ban the sale and consumption of alcohal

• It is then discovered that there has been a prohibition law in place, its just been ignored and they demand it be inforced.

• Homer then begins “boot-legging” making booze illegally.

Homer v 18th Amendment (cont’d)•Chief Wiggum (the city’s police chief) is

fired for failing to enforce the law.•He’s replaced by Rex Banner, an agent of

the US Treasury dept who has been given police powers by the Volstead Act.

•Banner then begins pursuing Homer aka “the Beer Baron”

•Homer supplies Moe’s Tavern which is now operating as an underground bar (speakeasy) with the bootlegged beer.

The Flapper•A young, dramatic, stylish, and

unconventional women- symbolized women’s changing behavior in the 1920s.

Discussion Questions•What is the theory of Evolution?•Who came up with it?•What is biblical Creationism?

Science v Religion: The Scopes “Monkey” Trial•Fundamentalists rejected the theory of

Evolution and believed in biblical Creationism instead.

•These two beliefs clashed in the Scopes “Monkey” Trial.