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B1 متوسط انگلیسی 13:12 Educational

The Roaring 20's: Crash Course US History #32

CrashCourse · 6,135,072 بازدید · اضافه شده 4 روز پیش

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زیرنویس‌ها (376 بخش‌ها)

00:00

Hi, I'm John Green, this is Crash Course US History, and today we're gonna learn about one of the best eras ever:

00:05

the 1920s.

00:06

The 20s gave us jazz, movies, radio, making out in cars, illegal liquor,

00:11

and the 20s also gave us prosperity--although not for everybody--

00:14

and gangsters, and a consumer culture based on credit,

00:18

and lots of prejudice against immigrants,

00:20

and eventually the worst economic crisis the US has ever seen.

00:23

Mr. Green, Mr. Green, but what about Gatsby?

00:25

Yeah, me from the past, it's true that Gastby turned out all right in the end,

00:28

but what preyed on Gatsby,

00:30

what foul dust trailed in the wake of his dreams,

00:32

did temporarily close out my interest in the aborted sorrows and short-winded elations of men.

00:37

*theme music*

00:47

So there's a stereotypical view of the 1920s as "The Roaring 20s,"

00:50

a decade of exciting change and new cultural touchstones,

00:53

as well as increased personal freedom and dancing.

00:56

And it really was a time of increased wealth--

00:59

for some people.

01:00

The quote of the decade has to go to our famously taciturn president from Massachusetts, Calvin Coolidge, who said,

01:08

Jay-Z would later update this for the 21st century noting,

01:14

But anyway, during the 1920s, the government helped business grow like gangbusters,

01:17

largely by not regulating it much at all.

01:20

This is known as “laissez-faire” capitalism.

01:22

Or “laissez-faire” capitalism if you’re good at speaking French.

01:24

The Republican Party dominated politics in the 1920s,

01:27

with all the presidents elected in the decade being

01:29

staunch conservative Republicans.

01:31

The federal government hewed to the policies favored by business lobbyists,

01:34

including lower taxes on personal income and business profits,

01:37

and efforts to weaken the power of unions.

01:40

Presidents Harding, Coolidge, and Hoover stocked the boards of the Federal Reserve

01:44

and the Federal Trade Commission with men

01:45

who shared their pro-business views,

01:47

shifting the country away from the economic regulation that had been favored by Progressives.

01:51

And that was very good for the American economy,

01:53

at least in the short run.

01:55

The 1920s were also marked by

01:56

quite a bit of government corruption,

01:58

most of which can be pinned to the

01:59

administration of Warren G. Harding. Now,

02:01

Harding himself wasn't terribly corrupt,

02:03

but he picked terrible friends. They

02:05

included Attorney General Harry

02:06

Daugherty who accepted money to not

02:08

prosecute criminals, and Interior

02:10

Secretary Albert fall, who took half a

02:12

million dollars from private business in

02:14

exchange for leases to government oil

02:16

reserves at Teapot Dome. Fall later

02:18

became the first cabinet member ever to

02:19

be convicted of a felony, but on the

02:21

other hand, business, man! Productivity rose

02:24

dramatically largely because older

02:26

industry's adopted Henry Ford's assembly

02:28

line techniques and newer industries

02:30

like aviation, chemicals, and electronics

02:32

grew up to provide Americans with new

02:34

products and new jobs. During the 1920s

02:37

annual production of cars tripled to 4.8

02:39

million, and automobile companies were

02:41

gradually consolidated into the big

02:43

three that we know today: Ford, Chrysler,

02:46

and Harley-Davidson. What? General Motors.

02:49

By 1929 half of all American families

02:52

owned a car and thus began the American

02:54

love affair with the automobile, which is

02:56

also

02:56

where love affairs were often

02:58

consummated, which is why in the 1920s

03:00

cars came to be known as Scootaloo

03:02

pooping chariots. What's that? They were

03:04

called brothels on wheels? And the

03:06

economy also grew because American

03:07

corporations were extending their reach

03:09

overseas, and American foreign investment

03:11

was greater than that of any other

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