This is a Hitskin.com skin preview
Install the skin • Return to the skin page
The Greatest Society at 50
2 posters
Page 1 of 1
The Greatest Society at 50
Today, the laws enacted between 1964 and 1968 are woven into the fabric of American life, in ways big and small. They have knocked down racial barriers, provided health care for the elderly and food for the poor, sustained orchestras and museums in cities across the country, put seat belts and padded dashboards in every automobile, garnished Connecticut Avenue in Northwest Washington with red oaks.
“We are living in Lyndon Johnson’s America,” said Joseph A. Califano Jr., who was LBJ’s top domestic policy adviser from 1965 through the end of his presidency. “This country is more the country of Lyndon Johnson than any other president.”
The backlash against the Great Society has been as enduring as its successes.
Virtually every political battle that rages today has roots in the federal expansion and experimentation that began in the 1960s. It set terms of engagement for ideological warfare over how to grapple with income inequality, whether to encourage a common curriculum in schools, affirmative action, immigration, even whether to strip federal funding for National Public Radio. (Yes, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting is another Great Society program.)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/national/2014/05/17/the-great-society-at-50/?hpid=z1
“We are living in Lyndon Johnson’s America,” said Joseph A. Califano Jr., who was LBJ’s top domestic policy adviser from 1965 through the end of his presidency. “This country is more the country of Lyndon Johnson than any other president.”
The backlash against the Great Society has been as enduring as its successes.
Virtually every political battle that rages today has roots in the federal expansion and experimentation that began in the 1960s. It set terms of engagement for ideological warfare over how to grapple with income inequality, whether to encourage a common curriculum in schools, affirmative action, immigration, even whether to strip federal funding for National Public Radio. (Yes, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting is another Great Society program.)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/national/2014/05/17/the-great-society-at-50/?hpid=z1
confuzzled dude- Posts : 10205
Join date : 2011-05-08
Re: The Greatest Society at 50
-> The below pretty much answers the debate we had a couple of days ago
"Some of the Great Society’s biggest accomplishments are rarely acknowledged today. For instance, the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 scrapped a 1920s-era quota system that had effectively shut out most of the world, except for blond, blue-eyed Western Europe.
The 1965 law inviting in Africans, Latin Americans and Asians “was in some ways the most important determinant of our ethnic composition,” said Schuck, who taught immigration law and policy at Yale Law School."
"Some of the Great Society’s biggest accomplishments are rarely acknowledged today. For instance, the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 scrapped a 1920s-era quota system that had effectively shut out most of the world, except for blond, blue-eyed Western Europe.
The 1965 law inviting in Africans, Latin Americans and Asians “was in some ways the most important determinant of our ethnic composition,” said Schuck, who taught immigration law and policy at Yale Law School."
confuzzled dude- Posts : 10205
Join date : 2011-05-08
Re: The Greatest Society at 50
>>>Some of the above is blatant nonsense (i.e. non blond southern Italians and Greeks and Eastern Europeans have come here since the early part of the 1900s). And Schuck's point is a non sequitur, unless he is talking personally in terms of the income he generated by filing green card apps. If his point is that the society became more diverse, that may well be true but important only if diversity is valued for its own sake. If the point is that the country benefited from the talents of Asian immigrants, yes, but it would have been dumb for them to keep out scientists and engineers because they were brown or yellow, Great Society or no Great Society. A superpower cannot be that dumb.confuzzled dude wrote:-> The below pretty much answers the debate we had a couple of days ago
"Some of the Great Society’s biggest accomplishments are rarely acknowledged today. For instance, the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 scrapped a 1920s-era quota system that had effectively shut out most of the world, except for blond, blue-eyed Western Europe.
The 1965 law inviting in Africans, Latin Americans and Asians “was in some ways the most important determinant of our ethnic composition,” said Schuck, who taught immigration law and policy at Yale Law School."
Kris- Posts : 5461
Join date : 2011-04-28
Re: The Greatest Society at 50
Were they treated on par with other white folks, wasn't anti-italianism prevalent those days?Kris wrote:>>>Some of the above is blatant nonsense (i.e. non blond southern Italians and Greeks and Eastern Europeans have come here since the early part of the 1900s). And Schuck's point is a non sequitur, unless he is talking personally in terms of the income he generated by filing green card apps. If his point is that the society became more diverse, that may well be true but important only if diversity is valued for its own sake. If the point is that the country benefited from the talents of Asian immigrants, yes, but it would have been dumb for them to keep out scientists and engineers because they were brown or yellow, Great Society or no Great Society. A superpower cannot be that dumb.confuzzled dude wrote:-> The below pretty much answers the debate we had a couple of days ago
"Some of the Great Society’s biggest accomplishments are rarely acknowledged today. For instance, the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 scrapped a 1920s-era quota system that had effectively shut out most of the world, except for blond, blue-eyed Western Europe.
The 1965 law inviting in Africans, Latin Americans and Asians “was in some ways the most important determinant of our ethnic composition,” said Schuck, who taught immigration law and policy at Yale Law School."
confuzzled dude- Posts : 10205
Join date : 2011-05-08
Re: The Greatest Society at 50
confuzzled dude wrote:Were they treated on par with other white folks, wasn't anti-italianism prevalent those days?Kris wrote:>>>Some of the above is blatant nonsense (i.e. non blond southern Italians and Greeks and Eastern Europeans have come here since the early part of the 1900s). And Schuck's point is a non sequitur, unless he is talking personally in terms of the income he generated by filing green card apps. If his point is that the society became more diverse, that may well be true but important only if diversity is valued for its own sake. If the point is that the country benefited from the talents of Asian immigrants, yes, but it would have been dumb for them to keep out scientists and engineers because they were brown or yellow, Great Society or no Great Society. A superpower cannot be that dumb.confuzzled dude wrote:-> The below pretty much answers the debate we had a couple of days ago
"Some of the Great Society’s biggest accomplishments are rarely acknowledged today. For instance, the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 scrapped a 1920s-era quota system that had effectively shut out most of the world, except for blond, blue-eyed Western Europe.
The 1965 law inviting in Africans, Latin Americans and Asians “was in some ways the most important determinant of our ethnic composition,” said Schuck, who taught immigration law and policy at Yale Law School."
>>>I thought his point was they were shut out in terms of immigration. The answer to your question: yes, they faced discrimination, as did Irish and Germans and many others. No one ever said America was perfect. It has been a work in progress, but the rate it which it has progressed is astounding. In the 20s, there were sign boards that said 'dogs and irish' not allowed. Catholics were not high on the totem pole. Within 40 years, there was an Irish Catholic President. As late as the early 60s, black folks were made to sit in the back of the bus in parts of the country. A black guy is sitting in the White House now. Admittedly, much of this came after hard fought victories, but it is the system allows those fights. The 'America is bad' crowd misses this big time.
Kris- Posts : 5461
Join date : 2011-04-28
Re: The Greatest Society at 50
Not sure I get it. There is nothing that says "The America is bad" in this thread in fact it is the opposite as the title itself explains.Kris wrote:confuzzled dude wrote:Were they treated on par with other white folks, wasn't anti-italianism prevalent those days?Kris wrote:>>>Some of the above is blatant nonsense (i.e. non blond southern Italians and Greeks and Eastern Europeans have come here since the early part of the 1900s). And Schuck's point is a non sequitur, unless he is talking personally in terms of the income he generated by filing green card apps. If his point is that the society became more diverse, that may well be true but important only if diversity is valued for its own sake. If the point is that the country benefited from the talents of Asian immigrants, yes, but it would have been dumb for them to keep out scientists and engineers because they were brown or yellow, Great Society or no Great Society. A superpower cannot be that dumb.confuzzled dude wrote:-> The below pretty much answers the debate we had a couple of days ago
"Some of the Great Society’s biggest accomplishments are rarely acknowledged today. For instance, the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 scrapped a 1920s-era quota system that had effectively shut out most of the world, except for blond, blue-eyed Western Europe.
The 1965 law inviting in Africans, Latin Americans and Asians “was in some ways the most important determinant of our ethnic composition,” said Schuck, who taught immigration law and policy at Yale Law School."
>>>I thought his point was they were shut out in terms of immigration. The answer to your question: yes, they faced discrimination, as did Irish and Germans and many others. No one ever said America was perfect. It has been a work in progress, but the rate it which it has progressed is astounding. In the 20s, there were sign boards that said 'dogs and irish' not allowed. Catholics were not high on the totem pole. Within 40 years, there was an Irish Catholic President. As late as the early 60s, black folks were made to sit in the back of the bus in parts of the country. A black guy is sitting in the White House now. Admittedly, much of this came after hard fought victories, but it is the system allows those fights. The 'America is bad' crowd misses this big time.
confuzzled dude- Posts : 10205
Join date : 2011-05-08
Similar topics
» Narendra Modi the greatest man since Gandhi? I accept that. Modi the saviour of the Indian nation? Accepted. Modi the sexiest man since Dharmendra? Accepted. Modi the greatest economist since Milton Friedman? Accepted.
» problems of society
» Society problems
» Consumer Society- to which I say
» Symptoms of an uncivilized society.
» problems of society
» Society problems
» Consumer Society- to which I say
» Symptoms of an uncivilized society.
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum