chapter 40 – fighting the cold war at home

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Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home How did Anxieties raised by the Cold War affect life in the United States?

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How did Anxieties raised by the Cold War affect life in the United States ?. Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home. Americans come under suspicion at home. Communist Sympathizers. People who believed in Communism but did not join the party - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

How did Anxieties raised by the Cold War affect life in the United States?

Page 2: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

Americans come under suspicion at home

Page 3: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

Communist SympathizersPeople who believed in

Communism but did not join the party

Some, feeling communism might destroy wealth and prosperity, accused people of being disloyal and subversive (overthrow gov’t)

Loyalty Oath and background ensued causing hundreds to lose their jobs

Page 4: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home
Page 5: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

House Un-American Activities Committee

Investigated film industry and other groups for communists

Studios blacklisted people ruining many careers

1957, the Supreme Court ruled that the Constitution does not give Congress unlimited power to investigate citizens’ private lives. Hollywood

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Page 6: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

Paul Robeson

Page 7: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

Charlie Chaplin

Page 8: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

Alger Hiss

Advisor to President Roosevelt accused of being a spy and convicted of perjury.

confirmed suspicion that Soviet spies were working in the United States.

Led to more fear and accusation

Page 9: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

Rosenberg Trial charged with passing

atomic secrets to the USSR. After a trial, both were executed

Some questioned whether the search for communists was going too far

some protested the severity of the sentence.

Page 10: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

McCarthyismthe practice of

publicly accusing someone of subversive activities without sufficient evidence

creating a climate of fear

Page 11: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home
Page 12: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home
Page 13: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

On a scale from 1 to 10, how concerned do you think Americans should have been about the possibility of communist subversion and the presence of Soviet spies in the United States during the Cold War?

Do you think the United States had the right to complete background checks and require loyalty oaths of government employees? Why or why not?

Were the actions of the House Un-Americans Activities Committee appropriate? Why or why not?

Does the government ever have the right to limit or even take away some of our freedoms in order to keep us safe ?

Page 14: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

Living with Nuclear Anxiety

Page 15: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

How might 1950s fifth graders have felt during a duck-and-cover lesson?

In what ways could such a lesson make you feel safer against the threat of a nuclear attack? What anxieties might have remained?

After learning to duck and cover, how might you have tried to change how you lived your life?

Why do you think the government would want to teach such a lesson to children?

Page 16: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

Atomic Age

Page 17: Chapter 40 – Fighting the Cold War at Home

Federal Civil Defense Administration