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Zorluk: OrtaThe Great Society and the War on Poverty

"The millions who are poor in the United States this day are the most invisible population that has ever existed. They are without lobby, they are without power, they are the first to be neglected, the first to be forgotten. In the thirties, the economic depression struck at all levels of society... But in the fifties and sixties, the poor are a separate, distinct, and invisible group who are left behind as the rest of the nation moves forward in unprecedented affluence."
— Michael Harrington, *The Other America*, 1962

Based on the analysis in the excerpt, how did the Great Society programs of the 1960s differ from the New Deal programs of the 1930s in their approach to poverty?

  1. Great Society programs focused on addressing structural poverty in a period of general affluence through education, healthcare, and job training, whereas the New Deal focused on immediate relief and economic recovery during a nationwide depression.Cevap
  2. B
    Great Society programs relied primarily on direct cash relief and federal work-relief projects for the general population, whereas the New Deal prioritized long-term structural reforms of the financial sector.
  3. C
    Great Society programs sought to nationalize major industries to redistribute wealth, whereas the New Deal utilized government deregulation to stimulate private business growth.
  4. D
    Great Society programs aimed to decrease the size of the federal government by transferring welfare administration to the states, whereas the New Deal centralized all welfare spending under federal agencies.

Cevap

Great Society programs focused on addressing structural poverty in a period of general affluence through education, healthcare, and job training, whereas the New Deal focused on immediate relief and economic recovery during a nationwide depression.
The correct option is correct because the Great Society occurred during the prosperous 1960s and sought to combat 'invisible' structural poverty through federally funded education, healthcare (Medicare and Medicaid), and job training programs. In contrast, the New Deal of the 1930s responded to a massive nationwide economic collapse by focusing on immediate financial relief, public works jobs, and banking reforms.

Adım Adım Çözüm

1
Analyze the stimulus
Michael Harrington's excerpt describes poverty in the 1960s as 'invisible' because it persisted amid widespread national affluence, contrasting it with the 1930s depression which was visible and affected all social levels.
To understand the historical context and the author's comparison between the two eras.
2
Identify the historical goals of the Great Society and the New Deal
The Great Society (1960s) aimed to end poverty and racial injustice during a time of economic prosperity through programs like Medicare, Medicaid, and Head Start. The New Deal (1930s) sought relief, recovery, and reform to address the immediate crisis of the Great Depression.
To compare the strategies and contexts of both federal reform movements.
3
Evaluate the choices to find the one that accurately distinguishes the two eras based on this context
The correct option accurately contrasts the Great Society's focus on structural poverty during affluence with the New Deal's focus on relief and recovery during a depression.
To select the option that correctly demonstrates mastery of the learning objective.

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The Great Society and the War on Poverty
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