Soru

Zorluk: Çok zorEnvironmentalism and the Energy Crisis

"Our energy crisis is an invisible crisis, which is slowly getting worse. It could become a catastrophe in the 1980s if we do not act... The oil and natural gas we rely on for 75 percent of our energy are running out... We must not be selfish. We must not think only of our own comfort. We must make sacrifices, and we must do it together. If we do, we will find that we have a better country, a stronger country, and a more secure country."

— President Jimmy Carter, Address to the Nation on Energy, April 18, 1977

President Carter’s rhetoric in the excerpt, particularly his call for collective sacrifice and acknowledgment of resource limits, contributed most directly to which of the following political developments in the late 1970s and early 1980s?

  1. A growing public disillusionment with the efficacy of federal governance, which catalyzed the electoral rise of a conservative movement promising deregulation and economic growthCevap
  2. B
    The immediate implementation of supply-side economic reforms under the Carter administration that successfully stimulated domestic oil production through federal deficit spending
  3. C
    A shift in foreign policy priorities away from detente toward a military doctrine focused on containing Soviet influence over the decision-making of OPEC oil-exporting states
  4. D
    The expansion of New Deal-style entitlement programs that successfully insulated low-income Americans from energy-related inflation

Cevap

A growing public disillusionment with the efficacy of federal governance, which catalyzed the electoral rise of a conservative movement promising deregulation and economic growth
The correct answer is correct because the economic distress caused by the energy crisis, combined with stagflation and a perceived lack of presidential leadership, led to widespread public skepticism regarding the federal government's ability to solve national problems. This crisis of confidence directly benefited the rising conservative movement, which offered a contrasting message of economic deregulation, reduced government intervention, and a rejection of the idea of national limits, culminating in Ronald Reagan's victory in 1980.

Adım Adım Çözüm

1
Analyze the stimulus context and tone.
President Carter frames the energy crisis as a moral challenge requiring national sacrifice and conservation, highlighting the limits of American resource abundance.
Understanding the core argument of the stimulus is necessary to connect it to broader historical shifts.
2
Connect the energy crisis to late 1970s political and economic conditions.
The energy crisis combined with stagflation to weaken public confidence in the federal government's ability to manage the national economy.
This establishes the historical link between the energy crisis and the rise of political opposition to government programs.
3
Identify the political consequence in the early 1980s.
The public's loss of faith in federal solutions facilitated the rise of the conservative movement, leading to the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980 on a platform of tax cuts, deregulation, and optimistic growth.
This links the immediate impact of the crisis to the long-term political shift of Period 8.

Anahtar Kavram

The political and economic impacts of the 1970s energy crisis on American confidence and the rise of modern conservatism.
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