Period 9: 1980–Present

156 questions

Question 41Question

Read the excerpt below.

'The old political divisions are fading. Our task is to bring together the businessman who is tired of federal regulation, the worker who sees his wages eroded by inflation, and the parent who believes that public policy has turned against traditional moral values. By uniting these groups under a single banner, we can reshape the nation’s political landscape.'
—Address by a conservative political strategist, 1979

The political strategy described in the excerpt contributed most directly to which of the following outcomes?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: The political realignment of the 1980 election, which united free-market advocates, social traditionalists, and disaffected working-class voters.

Answer

The political realignment of the 1980 election, which united free-market advocates, social traditionalists, and disaffected working-class voters.
The correct answer is correct because the strategist's speech outlines the creation of the New Right coalition. In the 1980 presidential election, Ronald Reagan successfully united fiscal conservatives (who wanted deregulation and tax cuts), social conservatives (such as the Moral Majority who focused on traditional values), and working-class Democrats (often called Reagan Democrats) who were frustrated by economic stagflation, leading to a major political realignment.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the stimulus excerpt to identify the constituent groups mentioned in the coalition.
The excerpt identifies three key groups: businessmen frustrated with federal regulation, workers affected by inflation, and parents concerned with traditional moral values.
Understanding the components of the coalition helps determine the nature of the movement being described.
2
Evaluate the options to see which historical event or development represents the successful unification of these groups.
The election of 1980 and the rise of the modern conservative movement brought these disparate factions together under Ronald Reagan's campaign.
This links the strategic goals of the 1979 excerpt to the concrete political outcome of the 1980 realignment.

Key Concept

The Conservative Movement and the Election of 1980
Estimated Time:1m 0s
Question 42Question

"There is no doubt that if we lived in a police state, it would be easier to catch terrorists. If we lived in a country where the police could search any home at any time, for any reason; if we lived in a country where the government could monitor our communications without judicial oversight... we would have a very secure country. But it would not be a free country. And it would not be America. ... [W]e must maintain our vigil against terrorism, but we must also maintain our vigil against the erosion of the very liberties that make us Americans."

— Senator Russ Feingold, speech on the Senate floor, October 2001

Which of the following debates from the post-9/11 era is most directly addressed by the Senator in this excerpt?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: The tension between expanding federal law enforcement power for security and protecting constitutional civil liberties.

Answer

The tension between expanding federal law enforcement power for security and protecting constitutional civil liberties.
The correct option is correct because the excerpt directly discusses the trade-off between security measures (like police searches and communication monitoring without judicial oversight) and civil liberties, which was the central debate surrounding the passage of the USA PATRIOT Act in the wake of the September 11 attacks.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the provided stimulus to identify the core argument and subject.
The speaker warns against creating a 'police state' and losing 'the very liberties that make us Americans' in the search for security.
This establishes that the context is the domestic response to terrorism, specifically focusing on the potential erosion of civil liberties.
2
Evaluate the choices to find which one matches the domestic focus on civil liberties versus national security.
The correct option addresses the tension between federal surveillance/security expansion and constitutional rights, which is the direct focus of the USA PATRIOT Act debates.
The wrong options focus on foreign policy shifts, isolationism, or war powers, which do not align with the domestic civil liberties focus of the text.

Key Concept

The War on Terror led to domestic debates over the balance between national security and civil liberties, notably surrounding legislation like the USA PATRIOT Act.
Estimated Time:1m 0s
Question 43Question

"We must always remember that the economic prosperity of the United States is linked directly to our energy security. While we recognize the long-term challenges posed by global climate change, we cannot support international treaties like the Kyoto Protocol. Doing so would place an unfair economic burden on American industries and workers while exempting major developing economies from similar emissions restrictions. Instead, the United States will lead through technological innovation, public-private partnerships, and voluntary reduction targets that preserve economic growth."

— President George W. Bush, speech on climate change policy, 2001

Which of the following debates in late-twentieth and early-twenty-first-century United States politics does the excerpt best reflect?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: The conflict between global environmental treaties and national economic interests

Answer

The conflict between global environmental treaties and national economic interests
The correct option is correct because the passage shows the Bush administration's opposition to the Kyoto Protocol on the grounds that it would damage the domestic economy while exempting developing nations. This highlights the recurring debate between participating in global climate initiatives and safeguarding national economic competitiveness.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the stimulus document and identify its primary argument.
The author (President George W. Bush) argues against joining the Kyoto Protocol because it would place an unfair economic burden on the United States and exempt developing nations, suggesting instead that economic growth and voluntary partnerships should drive environmental solutions.
This establishes the core perspective of the U.S. government on international climate action in the early 21st century.
2
Evaluate the choices to find which one aligns with this central argument.
The debate over global climate treaties versus domestic economic concerns directly matches the president's justification for rejecting the treaty.
This links the specific historical event (Kyoto Protocol rejection) to the broader thematic debate in AP U.S. History Period 9.

Key Concept

The ongoing tension in U.S. politics between international environmental obligations and national economic interests during the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
Question 44Question

"Today, largely because of the immigration wave of the last thirty years, we are once again becoming a nation of new immigrants. . . . This new wave is different. It is not just European; it is Asian, Latin American, African, Middle Eastern. It is changing the face of America. . . . We must decide: Will we treat this diversity as a source of strength or division? In a global economy, our diversity is a great asset."

— President Bill Clinton, Commencement Address at Portland State University, 1998

The developments described in the excerpt most directly contributed to which of the following political or social debates in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: Political and cultural debates over language policy, national identity, and the access of immigrants to public services.

Answer

Political and cultural debates over language policy, national identity, and the access of immigrants to public services.
The correct answer is correct because the dramatic increase in immigration from Latin America and Asia after 1980 sparked intense debates over national identity, multiculturalism, bilingual education, and the financial impact on public services (such as schools and healthcare) in states with high immigrant populations.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the stimulus context and the demographic changes described.
The excerpt by President Clinton highlights the post-1980 demographic shift, noting a wave of immigration dominated by individuals from Latin America, Asia, Africa, and the Middle East, replacing traditional European-dominated immigration patterns.
Understanding the core subject of the source helps identify the historical trend being tested.
2
Connect these demographic trends to the domestic history of Period 9 (1980–Present).
The rapid growth of Hispanic and Asian populations led to cultural debates over multiculturalism vs. assimilation, bilingual education policies, and legislative debates over immigrant access to public funding (such as California's Proposition 187 and the Welfare Reform Act of 1996).
Linking the stimulus to specific Period 9 historical events confirms the correct option.
3
Evaluate the options to find the most accurate historical outcome.
The option concerning political and cultural debates over language, identity, and public services directly aligns with these historical developments.
This confirms the correct option while eliminating choices that misrepresent late-20th-century political, foreign policy, or civil rights trends.

Key Concept

The social, political, and cultural debates generated by post-1980 immigration waves from Latin America and Asia.
Question 45Question

Source: President George H. W. Bush, Statement on Signing the Immigration Act of 1990, November 29, 1990

> "This legislation represents a significant step forward in our efforts to reform and modernize our nation’s immigration system. . . . S. 358 meets several objectives of this Administration: it provides for a significant increase in the number of immigrants admitted under the employment-based categories, while also expanding the opportunities for family reunification. By choosing to welcome more highly skilled and educated workers, we strengthen our economy and help ensure American competitiveness in the global marketplace."

The policy changes described in the excerpt most directly reflect which of the following late-twentieth-century developments?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: The transition to a knowledge-based economy that increased demand for highly skilled labor

Answer

The transition to a knowledge-based economy that increased demand for highly skilled labor
The correct answer is correct because the Immigration Act of 1990's emphasis on admitting more highly skilled and educated workers to ensure global competitiveness reflects the United States' transition toward a knowledge-based, service-oriented economy in the late twentieth century, where technological innovation and specialized skills became central to economic growth.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the stimulus passage.
The excerpt shows President George H.W. Bush discussing the Immigration Act of 1990, highlighting a policy that increases the admission of "highly skilled and educated workers" to ensure "competitiveness in the global marketplace."
Understanding the core message of the source text is necessary to connect it to broader historical trends.
2
Identify the historical context of the late-twentieth-century United States economy.
During the late twentieth century, the United States was transitioning away from traditional manufacturing toward a service-oriented, high-technology, and knowledge-based economy that valued skilled labor.
This context explains the economic rationale behind seeking highly skilled immigrants to boost competitiveness.
3
Evaluate the choices and select the option that directly connects the stimulus to this trend.
The transition to a knowledge-based economy matches the policy's focus on skilled labor and global competitiveness.
Connecting the stimulus to the correct historical development yields the correct answer.

Key Concept

Post-1980 Immigration and Cultural Diversity
Estimated Time:1m 0s
Question 46Question

"The laws and Constitution are designed to survive, and remain in force, in extraordinary times. Liberty and security can be reconciled; and in our system they are reconciled within the framework of the law. The Framers decided that the writ of habeas corpus, a vital instrument for the protection of individual liberty, must have a complexity that would allow it to be of value in different eras. . . . To hold that the political branches may switch the Constitution on or off at will would lead to a regime in which they, not this Court, say 'what the law is.'"

— Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, majority opinion in Boumediene v. Bush (2008)

The arguments expressed in the excerpt most directly reflect which of the following ongoing debates in United States history?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: The balance between national security demands and the protection of constitutional civil liberties.

Answer

The debate over the balance between national security demands and the protection of constitutional civil liberties.
The correct answer is correct because the Supreme Court's decision in Boumediene v. Bush (2008) directly addressed the federal government's detention of foreign terror suspects. The ruling established that the constitutional right to challenge detention (habeas corpus) applies to detainees held at Guantanamo Bay, reflecting the significant post-9/11 debate over how to protect civil liberties while maintaining national security.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the stimulus passage for the central subject and argument.
The text is from a 2008 Supreme Court opinion asserting that the writ of habeas corpus must be upheld even in extraordinary times and that the executive branch cannot unilaterally suspend constitutional protections.
Identifying the author's primary argument and the legal rights discussed (habeas corpus) establishes the context of the question.
2
Connect the specific ruling to the broader historical context of the post-9/11 era.
The case deals with the rights of detainees held at Guantanamo Bay during the War on Terror, which exemplifies the clash between the executive branch's pursuit of national security and the preservation of civil liberties.
Placing the legal dispute within the broader post-9/11 historical framework helps identify the theme of the question.
3
Evaluate the options to identify the statement that best captures this central historical theme.
The option regarding the balance between national security and civil liberties is correct because it directly addresses the constitutional tension over habeas corpus raised in the excerpt.
Comparing the options allows us to reject choices that are chronologically incorrect (such as Cold War communism or the Vietnam War) or off-topic (such as foreign policy unilateralism).

Key Concept

The ongoing tension between national security and civil liberties during times of crisis in the post-9/11 era.
Estimated Time:1m 30s
Question 47Question

Source: Mikhail Gorbachev, Address to the United Nations General Assembly, December 7, 1988.

"Today, we are entered upon an era when progress will be based on the common interests of the whole of humankind. The concept of development at another's expense is becoming obsolete. The compulsion and arms race which accompanied the Cold War are no longer viable instruments of foreign policy. The principle of freedom of choice is mandatory. This applies to both the capitalist and socialist systems. We are also witnesses to the most important landmark in our history: the decision to reduce our armed forces. Over the next two years, the Soviet Union will unilaterally reduce its army by 500,000 men and withdraw combat divisions from Eastern Europe. We do this to foster trust and transition to a new international order."

Which of the following best explains the shift in Soviet foreign policy described in the excerpt?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: A combination of severe internal economic stagnation, domestic political restructuring, and a desire to negotiate diplomatic agreements with the West

Answer

A combination of severe internal economic stagnation, domestic political restructuring, and a desire to negotiate diplomatic agreements with the West
The shift in Soviet policy under Gorbachev was driven by a combination of internal and external factors. Internally, the Soviet Union faced deep economic stagnation, which prompted Gorbachev to introduce political and economic reforms (glasnost and perestroika). Externally, these domestic challenges made it unsustainable for the Soviet Union to maintain its costly military commitments, leading Gorbachev to seek diplomatic rapprochement and arms reduction agreements with the United States.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the stimulus document to identify the speaker, context, and core argument.
The document is an address by Mikhail Gorbachev in December 1988 announcing unilateral cuts in Soviet armed forces and endorsing 'freedom of choice' for both capitalist and socialist nations.
Understanding the source and context allows us to pinpoint the specific historical moment: the late 1980s, when the Soviet Union began changing its foreign policy stance.
2
Evaluate the causal factors behind the shift in Soviet policy during this period.
Gorbachev's reforms (glasnost and perestroika) were initiated due to severe domestic economic stagnation and political inefficiencies. To fund internal reforms, the Soviet Union needed to reduce its heavy military burden and ease tensions with the United States.
This step distinguishes between purely external pressures and the internal economic/political crises that motivated Soviet leaders to seek diplomatic compromises.
3
Assess the options to find the one that best captures the combination of internal and external factors.
The correct option correctly identifies the combination of internal economic stagnation, domestic political restructuring, and the pursuit of diplomatic agreements, while the incorrect options either overemphasize U.S. military pressure or contain chronological inaccuracies.
This leads to the final selection of the correct option.

Key Concept

The end of the Cold War was a product of both internal Soviet challenges (such as economic stagnation and Gorbachev's reforms of glasnost and perestroika) and external factors (including diplomatic negotiations and military/economic pressure from the United States).
Estimated Time:1m 0s
Question 48Question

Read the passage below carefully and answer the question that follows.

"The national identity of this country has been forged by the interaction of many cultures... But the conception of the United States as a nation of distinct, self-contained, and permanent groups is a very different matter. It is a rejection of the historic American concept of 'one people'—a concept that has, for all our failings, held this diverse country together. The new gospel of ethnic separatism threatens to replace the classic image of the melting pot with a babel of discordant voices."
— Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., *The Disuniting of America: Reflections on a Multicultural Society*, 1991

Which of the following developments in United States society in the period after 1980 is most directly reflected by the arguments expressed in the excerpt?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: Political and cultural debates over the assimilation of immigrants from Latin America and Asia and the rise of multiculturalism

Answer

Political and cultural debates over the assimilation of immigrants from Latin America and Asia and the rise of multiculturalism
The correct answer is correct because the post-1980 era saw massive immigration shifts from regions outside Europe, primarily Latin America and Asia. This led to vibrant debates over multiculturalism, bilingual education, and the degree to which immigrants should assimilate into traditional American culture, as reflected in Schlesinger's critique of ethnic division.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the provided stimulus to identify the main argument and its historical context.
The author (Schlesinger, writing in 1991) is criticizing 'ethnic separatism' and defending the traditional idea of the American 'melting pot' against multiculturalism.
This establishes that the question is addressing debates over national identity, assimilation, and cultural diversity in the late 20th century.
2
Correlate the text's theme with post-1980 demographic and cultural trends.
Following the Immigration Act of 1965, immigration from Latin America and Asia surged, transforming the demographic landscape of the U.S. by the 1980s and 1990s and sparking significant debate over multiculturalism and cultural assimilation.
This identifies the historical development that directly generated the debates Schlesinger describes.
3
Evaluate the choices to find the one that accurately describes these debates and links them to the correct historical era.
The option referencing political and cultural debates over the assimilation of Latin American and Asian immigrants and the rise of multiculturalism perfectly aligns with the stimulus.
The other options represent economic policies (supply-side economics) or programs/doctrines from earlier periods (Great Society, containment) that do not address the demographic and cultural issues in the excerpt.

Key Concept

The debates over multiculturalism and demographic shifts resulting from post-1980 immigration patterns in the United States.
Question 49Question

During the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, the advent of the microchip, the internet, and fiber-optic cables facilitated a rapid transition toward a globalized, knowledge-based economy. This digital revolution allowed corporations to manage real-time supply chains, coordinate international production, and outsource manufacturing jobs to countries with lower labor costs, while centering high-value financial and technological services within the United States.

Which of the following was a direct social or political consequence of the economic developments described in the passage?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: The decline in membership of manufacturing labor unions and the stagnation of wages for blue-collar workers

Answer

The decline in membership of manufacturing labor unions and the stagnation of wages for blue-collar workers
The economic transition described in the passage reflects deindustrialization and the rise of a service-oriented economy. The outsourcing of manufacturing jobs reduced the demand for domestic industrial labor, leading directly to a sharp decline in the membership and political leverage of industrial labor unions. Concurrently, wages for blue-collar workers without advanced education stagnated as the economy increasingly rewarded specialized technological and financial skills.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the stimulus passage.
Identify that the stimulus describes the transition of the U.S. economy from manufacturing to high-tech/service sectors, facilitated by the digital revolution and globalization.
Understanding the context of the economic transition in the late 20th and early 21st centuries is essential to predicting its social and political outcomes.
2
Assess the options to find the direct social and political consequence of this transition.
Realize that outsourcing and the decline of manufacturing jobs directly reduced the power of industrial labor unions (which were historically key to blue-collar political influence) and left low-skilled workers with stagnant wages in a highly specialized service economy.
This links the economic shift directly to its social and labor market consequences, validating the correct answer.
3
Evaluate and rule out the incorrect distractors.
Confirm that the U.S. pursued deregulation and free trade rather than mercantilism, rejected Great Society-style job programs in favor of market-led policies, and experienced growing income inequality rather than a narrowing wealth gap.
Ruling out distractors ensures that the selected option is the only historically accurate and logical consequence.

Key Concept

The economic and social impacts of the digital revolution and economic globalization, specifically deindustrialization, wage stagnation, and the decline of labor unions.
Question 50Question

“The transition of the United States economy at the turn of the twenty-first century was characterized not merely by the expansion of the personal computer, but by a deeper structural realignment. As international trade agreements lowered tariff barriers, multinational corporations leveraged new information technologies to coordinate global supply chains, offshoring manufacturing processes to developing nations. Domestically, this dual process of globalization and digitization bifurcated the labor market. While high-skill, tech-adjacent sectors experienced unprecedented growth and wealth accumulation, the traditional manufacturing sectors that had anchored the mid-century middle class saw rapid contraction, accelerating a shift toward service-sector employment that offered fewer institutional protections and lower real wage growth.”

—Adapted from a modern economic history of post-Cold War America

The economic shifts described in the passage most directly contributed to which of the following domestic developments in the United States between 1990 and 2015?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: A growing stagnation of real wages for working-class families alongside increasing economic inequality.

Answer

A growing stagnation of real wages for working-class families alongside increasing economic inequality.
The correct answer is correct because the loss of unionized manufacturing jobs to offshoring and automation, combined with the growth of low-wage service sector employment, directly led to wage stagnation for many working-class families and a dramatic increase in income inequality during the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the provided historical stimulus to extract the key arguments regarding structural economic changes.
The text argues that trade agreements (globalization) and information technologies (digitization) led to global supply chains, manufacturing decline, labor market bifurcation, and growth in service-sector jobs with low wage growth.
This establishes the causal mechanisms described in the source (offshoring, automation, and labor market division).
2
Recall outside historical knowledge of United States economic and demographic trends from 1990 to 2015.
Historical data confirms that union density declined, the U.S. pursued free-trade agreements like NAFTA, the Sun Belt grew, and the income gap between the wealthiest Americans and the working class widened significantly due to deindustrialization and the rise of a service economy.
This outside knowledge is necessary to assess which option represents a real, historically accurate domestic consequence of the described trends.
3
Evaluate each option by comparing it to the recalled historical developments and the prompt's timeline.
The option describing stagnant real wages and growing economic inequality is the only historically accurate consequence of deindustrialization and the transition to a service/digital economy.
This identifies the correct answer while filtering out options that contain historical misconceptions or demographic errors.

Key Concept

The economic impact of the digital revolution and globalization on the U.S. workforce, characterized by deindustrialization, the decline of union influence, and the rise of income inequality.
Question 51Question

Read the following passage and answer the question below:

"The rise of the Sun Belt is often credited to the triumph of the 'rugged individualist' ethos and the appeal of low taxes and right-to-work laws. Yet, this narrative ignores the massive, sustained flow of federal dollars into the region. From defense contracts and aerospace installations during the Cold War to massive water reclamation projects and interstate highway systems, the federal government essentially subsidized the suburban and industrial growth of the South and West. Consequently, the political shift that followed was not merely an organic rejection of the state, but a complex realignment where regions built by federal intervention became the vanguard of a movement dedicated to dismantling it."
—Adapted from historical analyses of post-1980 political geography

The historical interpretation expressed in the excerpt most directly challenges which of the following arguments regarding the political realignment of the Sun Belt post-1980?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: The claim that the rise of Southern and Western conservatism was an organic, grassroots movement independent of federal economic support.

Answer

The claim that the rise of Southern and Western conservatism was an organic, grassroots movement independent of federal economic support.
The correct answer is correct because the excerpt explicitly argues that the growth and subsequent conservative political realignment of the Sun Belt was not simply an organic, grassroots rejection of federal power, but rather a development heavily subsidized by federal intervention (such as defense projects, aerospace installations, water reclamation, and highways). Therefore, it directly challenges the narrative that this conservative shift was entirely independent of federal economic support.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the provided historical excerpt to identify its main argument.
The author argues that while the rise of the Sun Belt is often attributed to 'rugged individualism' and free enterprise, it was actually heavily subsidized by federal spending (defense contracts, aerospace, water projects, highways).
Understanding the author's core thesis is necessary to identify which counter-argument the excerpt is directly challenging.
2
Identify the historical connection between Sun Belt growth and the political realignment post-1980.
The growth of the Sun Belt shifted demographic and electoral weight to the South and West, helping propel the modern conservative movement into national prominence.
This links the physical migration and demographic shifts to the political realignment mentioned in the question prompt.
3
Evaluate the answer choices to determine which claim is directly contradicted or challenged by the excerpt.
The claim that the conservative rise in the South and West was an organic grassroots movement independent of federal support is directly challenged by the author's evidence of massive federal subsidies.
Comparing the choices with the excerpt reveals that the correct choice describes the narrative of 'individualism' and 'rejection of the state' that the author explicitly critiques.

Key Concept

The political and economic factors driving Sun Belt migration and political realignment in the late twentieth century, including the role of federal defense spending and infrastructure projects.
Estimated Time:3m 0s
Question 52Question

"Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem. From time to time we've been tempted to believe that society has become too complex to be managed by self-rule, that government by an elite group is superior to government for, by, and of the people. Well, if no one among us is capable of governing himself, then who among us has the capacity to govern someone else? All of us together, in and out of government, must bear the burden. The solutions we seek must be equitable, with no one group singled out to pay a higher price."

— President Ronald Reagan, First Inaugural Address, January 20, 1981

The political philosophy expressed in the excerpt most directly challenged which of the following prevailing mid-twentieth-century political beliefs?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: The belief that federal government intervention and spending were essential to solving social and economic problems.

Answer

The belief that federal government intervention and spending were essential to solving social and economic problems.
The correct answer is correct because Ronald Reagan's First Inaugural Address marked a significant ideological pivot in American political history. For nearly five decades prior, dating back to Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal and extending through Lyndon B. Johnson's Great Society, a bipartisan consensus largely accepted that the federal government should play an active role in regulating the economy and providing social welfare. Reagan's declaration that 'government is the problem' directly challenged this assumption, laying the groundwork for supply-side economics, deregulation, and attempts to limit federal spending on social programs.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the stimulus document for core themes and arguments.
Ronald Reagan argues that 'government is not the solution... government is the problem' and questions the capacity of a centralized elite to govern the nation, advocating for reduced government scope.
Understanding the source's main argument is necessary to identify what it is opposing.
2
Recall the dominant political consensus of the mid-twentieth century prior to 1980.
The prevailing consensus was defined by New Deal liberalism and the Great Society, which favored active federal intervention, regulatory expansion, and social safety nets.
This establishes the historical baseline that Reagan's conservative coalition sought to challenge.
3
Compare the perspective in the stimulus with the options to identify which political belief is being directly contested.
Reagan's assertion that government itself is the problem directly targets the core liberal assumption that federal intervention and spending are the primary solutions to socioeconomic issues.
This links the historical context to the specific question asked.

Key Concept

Reaganomics and the Conservative Challenge to the Liberal Consensus
Estimated Time:2m 0s
Question 53Question

“The rapid deployment of fiber-optic networks, the internet, and personal computers has fundamentally altered how American companies operate. Functions that once required physical proximity—such as data processing, customer service, and software development—can now be performed instantaneously by workers located anywhere in the world. While these advances have reduced costs for corporations and lowered prices for consumers, they have simultaneously exposed American clerical and technical workers to direct international competition. The stability of the mid-century corporate career is being replaced by a highly flexible, but far less secure, global labor market.”

—Testimony before a congressional subcommittee on economic technology, 1998

The developments described in the excerpt most directly contributed to which of the following economic trends in the United States during the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: The outsourcing of service-sector and information-based jobs to foreign markets

Answer

The outsourcing of service-sector and information-based jobs to foreign markets
The correct answer is correct because the expansion of digital communication technologies like the internet and fiber-optic networks made physical location less important, enabling corporations to outsource white-collar and service-sector jobs to developing nations with lower labor costs.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the stimulus document for key historical context and clues.
The excerpt is from 1998 congressional testimony detailing how technological advancements like fiber-optic networks and the internet allow tasks to be done globally, which exposes domestic technical and clerical workers to international competition.
Identifying the central theme of the stimulus connects the digital revolution to globalization and its impact on the U.S. labor force.
2
Evaluate the choices in the context of Period 9 economic trends.
Identify that the shift allowed companies to relocate white-collar and service jobs to foreign nations, which is known as offshoring or outsourcing.
Connecting the stimulus's description of global competition in non-physical service tasks to the historical trend of outsourcing.

Key Concept

The economic impact of the digital revolution and globalization in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, specifically the outsourcing of service jobs and the integration of global labor markets.
Question 54Question

"Our war on terror begins with al Qaeda, but it does not end there. It will not end until every terrorist group of global reach has been found, stopped, and defeated. ... Americans should not expect one battle, but a lengthy campaign, unlike any other we have ever seen. We will direct every resource at our command—every means of diplomacy, every tool of intelligence, every instrument of law enforcement, every financial influence, and every necessary weapon of war—to the disruption and to the defeat of the global terror network."
— President George W. Bush, Address to a Joint Session of Congress, September 20, 2001

Which of the following best describes the shift in United States foreign policy represented by the goals outlined in the excerpt?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: A transition from containing sovereign nation-states to combating decentralized, non-state networks

Answer

The transition from containing sovereign nation-states to combating decentralized, non-state networks
The goals described in the excerpt represent a transition from containing sovereign nation-states to combating decentralized, non-state networks. While twentieth-century U.S. foreign policy, particularly during the Cold War, focused on deterring and containing established nation-states like the Soviet Union, the post-9/11 era required a shift to target mobile, non-state terrorist organizations and networks that operated across international borders.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Identify the historical context of the speech, which occurred immediately after the September 11 attacks and marked the declaration of the War on Terror.
Contextualized the speech as the starting point of the War on Terror.
Understanding the immediate historical context helps clarify the intended targets and methods of the policy.
2
Analyze the foreign policy goals described in the text, focusing on the target ('every terrorist group of global reach') and the methods ('every necessary weapon of war' and 'global terror network').
Identified the focus on non-state actors and global networks rather than traditional borders.
This highlights the shift in target definition from countries to decentralized networks.
3
Contrast this new paradigm with the previous dominant foreign policy framework (Cold War containment of nation-states) to identify the core shift in U.S. foreign policy.
Recognized the shift from containing state actors to preempting and dismantling non-state terror networks.
This directly answers the prompt regarding the foreign policy shift.

Key Concept

The War on Terror and Post-9/11 Security
Question 55Question

"We must stand against the tide of moral decay that has swept our nation over the last two decades. The breakdown of the traditional family, the removal of prayer from public schools, and the rise of secular humanism are not just private concerns; they are political mandates. It is time for religious Americans to register to vote, to organize, and to reclaim the leadership of this country from a secular establishment that has led us astray."

— Adapted from a political organization's statement, 1980

The mobilization described in the excerpt most directly contributed to which of the following political shifts by 1980?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: The formation of a new conservative coalition that successfully united evangelical Christians with traditional fiscal conservatives

Answer

The mobilization described in the excerpt most directly contributed to the formation of a new conservative coalition that successfully united evangelical Christians with traditional fiscal conservatives.
The correct answer is correct because the late 1970s saw the emergence of a powerful new political coalition. Social and religious conservatives, motivated by issues like opposition to abortion, the removal of prayer in public schools, and perceived moral decline, organized organizations like the Moral Majority. They united with fiscal conservatives, business leaders, and Cold War hawks to form a new coalition that propelled Ronald Reagan to the presidency in 1980, reshaping the American political landscape.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the stimulus context, author, and date.
The excerpt is from 1980 and expresses concern over moral decay, secular humanism, and the breakdown of the traditional family, advocating for religious voters to organize politically.
Understanding the source helps identify the growth of the Religious Right as a political force by 1980.
2
Connect the stimulus to the political environment of the late 1970s and 1980.
This period saw the formation of the 'New Right' or conservative coalition, combining social/religious conservatives with fiscal conservatives who favored deregulation and lower taxes.
This coalition was crucial to the realignment that resulted in the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980.
3
Evaluate the options against the historical context.
The option describing the formation of a new conservative coalition uniting evangelical Christians with fiscal conservatives directly aligns with the shift that occurred in 1980, while the other options represent liberal expansionism, Keynesian economics, or a misunderstanding of late Cold War foreign policy.
Differentiating correct historical trends from common misconceptions ensures the selection of the correct answer.

Key Concept

The mobilization of conservative voters and the formation of the conservative coalition in the late 20th century.

Hints

1
Consider who Jerry Falwell and the Moral Majority represented and how they allied themselves during the 1980 election.

Practice More

Analyze the impact of demographic shifts, particularly migration to the Sun Belt, on the rise of the conservative movement.
Estimated Time:1m 30s
Question 56Question

"We accept the challenge of the 1980s: to make America work again, to make our nation secure again, to make our government responsive to the people again. We pledge to reduce the growth of federal spending, to restrain the growth of the money supply, and to enact a program of across-the-board tax cuts to stimulate investment and job creation. We also reaffirm our commitment to traditional family values, the right to life, and a strong national defense to counter Soviet expansionism."

— Republican Party Platform, 1980

Which of the following historical developments during the 1980s best illustrates the internal tension within the political coalition described in the excerpt?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: The rapid growth of the federal deficit due to the combination of tax cuts, increased military spending, and the retention of major social welfare programs

Answer

The rapid growth of the federal deficit due to the combination of tax cuts, increased military spending, and the retention of major social welfare programs
The correct option is correct because the coalition that propelled the conservative movement to victory in 1980 was composed of diverse factions with competing goals. Traditional economic libertarians wanted reduced government spending and tax cuts, while working-class voters ('Reagan Democrats') supported the preservation of safety-net programs like Social Security. Furthermore, defense hawks demanded a substantial increase in military spending to counter the Soviet Union. The administration attempted to satisfy all these factions by cutting taxes and boosting military spending while leaving major entitlement programs largely intact, which resulted in a massive expansion of the federal deficit during the 1980s, directly illustrating the structural tension within the coalition.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the provided text from the 1980 Republican Platform to identify its primary goals.
The platform outlines a dual commitment to reducing federal spending, lowering taxes, and strengthening national defense.
Understanding the stated goals of the platform is necessary to identify the subsequent policy contradictions.
2
Identify the key components of the conservative coalition that formed around the election of 1980.
The coalition consisted of free-market libertarians (demanding tax cuts and deregulation), defense hawks (demanding increased military spending), and socially conservative working-class voters ('Reagan Democrats') who relied on core welfare programs.
This shows how the coalition's diverse constituents held competing priorities.
3
Evaluate how these competing priorities created tension and policy challenges in practice during the 1980s.
To keep the coalition together, the Reagan administration pursued tax cuts and defense spending increases but could not dismantle popular entitlement programs (like Social Security) due to voter pressure.
This explains the compromise that had to be made to maintain political power.
4
Determine the fiscal outcome of these policy decisions.
Lower tax revenues combined with rising military expenditures and unchecked entitlement spending led to record-setting federal deficits.
This identifies the option that best illustrates the real-world consequence of the coalition's internal tension.

Key Concept

The creation and fiscal challenges of the modern conservative coalition in the 1980 election
Question 57Question

"The Old Right was intellectual, elitist, and print-oriented. It was content to write essays in journals and debate theory while losing elections. The New Right is activist, populist, and operational. We are organizing at the grassroots. We have built a coalition from what used to be isolated, single-issue groups—middle-class tax protesters, opponents of federal school busing, religious conservatives alarmed by the erosion of traditional family values, and defense hawks concerned about the perception of American weakness abroad. By bypassing the establishment media through direct-mail campaigns, we have welded these disparate factions into a new electoral majority."

—Adapted from Richard Viguerie, *The New Right: We're Ready to Lead*, 1980

Which of the following best explains how the political strategy described in the excerpt succeeded in reshaping the American political landscape by the election of 1980?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: It capitalized on economic anxiety and cultural backlash to align socially conservative working-class voters with traditional corporate and national defense advocates.

Answer

The strategy succeeded by capitalizing on economic anxiety and cultural backlash to align socially conservative working-class voters with traditional corporate and national defense advocates.
The correct option is correct because the 'New Right' coalition successfully united diverse interest groups under a single banner in 1980. The strategy combined traditional fiscal conservatives seeking deregulation and lower taxes with evangelical Christians and social conservatives reacting against the cultural changes of the 1960s and 1970s. Additionally, economic stagnation (stagflation) and foreign policy crises allowed this movement to win over northern white working-class voters ('Reagan Democrats') who had historically voted for Democrats, thus reshaping the American electorate.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the stimulus document to identify the core components of the political strategy described.
The author outlines a strategy of building a populist grassroots coalition from single-issue groups, including tax protesters, social/religious conservatives, and national defense hawks, using direct-mail campaigns.
This establishes the historical context of the 'New Right' coalition that emerged in the late 1970s.
2
Evaluate the historical developments of the late 1970s that created a receptive environment for this coalition.
Stagflation (high inflation and unemployment) and perceived foreign policy failures (e.g., the Iran hostage crisis) weakened the Democratic incumbent, while social shifts fueled cultural backlash among religious conservatives.
This links the strategy of the New Right to the specific economic and social conditions leading up to the 1980 election.
3
Assess how these disparate factions were combined into an electoral majority.
By framing economic conservatism (tax cuts, deregulation) and social conservatism (family values) as compatible goals under a strong anti-communist foreign policy, the Republican platform successfully united corporate interests with working-class voters.
This explains the mechanics of the 'Reagan Coalition' and its victory in 1980.

Key Concept

The formation of the conservative Reagan Coalition in the 1980 election, combining fiscal, social, and defense conservatives.
Question 58Question

"For decades, our security rested on containment and deterrence—the assumption that a visible nation-state enemy would hesitate to strike because of the certainty of mutual destruction. But against networks of shadow adversaries who value no territory and hold no citizens hostage, deterrence is obsolete. We cannot wait for the smoking gun to appear in the form of a mushroom cloud. Our defense must now be proactive, dismantling these networks at their source before they can launch catastrophic attacks against our homeland."
— Adapted from a United States national security policy document, 2002

Which of the following best describes the primary shift in United States foreign policy goals that occurred as a result of the developments described in the excerpt?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: A shift from a reliance on the containment of nation-states to preemptive military action against non-state networks

Answer

A shift from a reliance on the containment of nation-states to preemptive military action against non-state networks
The correct answer is correct because it accurately identifies the transition from the Cold War-era policy of containment and deterrence, which was directed at defined nation-states like the Soviet Union, to a new policy of preemptive action targeting non-state terrorist networks (such as al-Qaeda) that do not operate under traditional state boundaries.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the stimulus to identify the core historical change being described.
The speaker argues that traditional containment and deterrence are obsolete against non-state networks.
This establishes the transition from Cold War security paradigms.
2
Identify the new policy strategy proposed in the excerpt.
The policy advocates for a proactive, preemptive defense to dismantle networks at their source.
This highlights the shift to preemptive action against non-state terrorist organizations.
3
Match these elements to the historical shift in post-9/11 United States foreign policy.
The correct option accurately contrasts the prior reliance on containment of nation-states with the new strategy of preemptive action against non-state actors.
This represents the defining change in national security strategy during the War on Terror.

Key Concept

The shift in post-9/11 United States foreign policy from Cold War-era containment and deterrence of nation-states to preemptive military action against non-state terrorist networks.
Question 59Question

"The administration’s economic program is a gamble with the livelihoods of millions of working Americans. By combining massive tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations with severe reductions in vital social programs, it reverses decades of progress toward social equity. This is not a policy of shared sacrifice; it is a redistribution of income upward..."
— Lane Kirkland, President of the AFL-CIO, testimony before Congress, 1981

Which of the following historical developments during the 1980s best explains the perspective expressed in the excerpt?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: The enactment of supply-side policies that significantly reduced tax rates for corporations and wealthy individuals while curbing growth in federal spending on social welfare programs.

Answer

The enactment of supply-side policies that significantly reduced tax rates for corporations and wealthy individuals while curbing growth in federal spending on social welfare programs.
The critique in the excerpt focuses on how the tax cuts and social spending reductions under the Reagan administration disproportionately benefited the wealthy at the expense of social programs. This aligns with the historical reality of the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981, which slashed top marginal income tax rates and reduced funding for programs like food stamps and job training.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Analyze the primary source text by AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland.
Identify that the speaker is criticizing the Reagan administration's domestic policy for combining 'massive tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations' with 'severe reductions in vital social programs.'
Understanding the central argument of the stimulus is necessary to connect it to the correct historical context.
2
Recall the domestic economic policies implemented under President Ronald Reagan in the early 1980s.
Connect Kirkland's critique to the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 and the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981, which enacted supply-side tax cuts and spending cuts.
Associating the critic's perspective with the specific policies of Reaganomics allows for the identification of the corresponding historical development.
3
Evaluate the options to determine which policy development best matches the core complaints described in the excerpt while avoiding common historical misconceptions.
Select the option stating that supply-side policies reduced tax rates for corporations and wealthy individuals while curbing social welfare spending growth.
This option accurately captures the historical reality of the early 1980s and explains the critique of upward wealth redistribution.

Key Concept

The debates and legislative goals surrounding Reaganomics and supply-side economics in the 1980s.
Question 60Question

Read the excerpt below and answer the following question:

"We are not proposing to dismantle the federal government; we are proposing to make it work. It is not our intention to eliminate the regulatory agencies, but to redirect them to their proper functions. We must reduce the burden of taxation, which has stifled productivity, and reassert American strength abroad to counter the growing influence of our adversaries."
—Adaptation of a conservative policy paper, 1980

Which of the following best explains how the ideas in the excerpt contributed to the political realignment in the 1980 presidential election?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: They united fiscal conservatives, national security advocates, and social traditionalists into a powerful new electoral coalition.

Answer

They united fiscal conservatives, national security advocates, and social traditionalists into a powerful new electoral coalition.
The correct answer is correct because the new conservative movement of the late 1970s and 1980 brought together diverse groups—including fiscal conservatives, defense hawks, and social traditionalists—under a unified agenda. This coalition succeeded in electing Ronald Reagan in 1980, marking a major realignment in American politics.

Step-by-Step Solution

1
Identify the key components of the conservative agenda mentioned in the stimulus.
The text references tax reduction, deregulation (economic goals), and a strong foreign policy posture (national security).
Understanding the elements of the text allows the reader to connect them to the broader conservative ideology of 1980.
2
Contextualize these goals within the political environment of the late 1970s and the 1980 election.
Voter dissatisfaction with stagflation and foreign policy crises (like the Iran hostage crisis) created receptivity to these ideas.
This establishes the historical context of the political realignment.
3
Analyze how these disparate groups formed the Reagan coalition.
The rhetoric united free-market advocates, defense hawks, and social conservatives behind a single candidate.
This directly answers why this coalition led to the realignment in the 1980 presidential election.

Key Concept

The Rise of the Conservative Movement and the Reagan Coalition
Estimated Time:1m 30s
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Period 9: 1980–Present — AP United States History — Page 3 | Examkin