ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Period 7: 1890–1945 Videos 19 videos

AP U.S. History 2.3 Period 7: 1890-1945
208 Views

AP U.S. History 2.3 Period 7: 1890-1945. The language used in the excerpt most strongly supports which of the following ideas?

AP U.S. History 2.4 Period 7: 1890-1945
223 Views

AP U.S. History 2.4 Period 7: 1890-1945. Besides forcing Japan to surrender, what was another primary goal of dropping the second atomic bomb?

AP U.S. History 1.1 Period 7: 1890–1945
291 Views

AP U.S. History 1.1 Period 7: 1890–1945. The Clayton Antitrust Act marked a new period in American labor relations because it...what?

See All

AP U.S. History 2.2 Period 7: 1890–1945 206 Views


Share It!


Description:

AP U.S. History 2.2 Period 7: 1890–1945. The sentiment expressed above most radically lost public support after which of the following events?

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

Thank you We sneak and here's your shmoop du jour

00:05

brought to you by isolationism Preferred strategy of middle children

00:10

on family vacations All right here's The excerpt in the

00:15

viewing pen situation notifying government training too public there's a

00:19

letter here all right And the question the sentiment expressed

00:23

above most radically lost public support after which of the

00:27

following events and here your pencil answer creation All right

00:33

we know from the date on this excerpt that the

00:36

u s was in major isolationist mode at the time

00:40

preferring to remain on the sidelines of any international conflict

00:43

rather than get involved So we need to figure out

00:45

which answer best describes why the public would have suddenly

00:48

stopped supporting this foreign policy principle Would these sentiments have

00:52

radically lost public support after a the second great migration

00:56

the second great migration refers to the internal movement of

01:00

african americans in the u s not foreign policies that

01:04

don't make anything for the isolationist zeal have dampened following

01:07

see the great depression Well because the great depression crippled

01:11

the us economy people believe that america should remain isolationist

01:15

in order to get back on its economic feet that

01:17

knocks out c too with the public have turned on

01:20

isolationism after d the treaty of versailles Well actually the

01:24

treaty of versailles was one of the peace treaties to

01:26

end world war ii And after such a horrible international

01:29

conflict people were ready to leave it all alone and

01:32

get back to their own thing So it's not d

01:34

either which means public support for isolationism would have eroded

01:38

after b the attack on pearl harbor america's illusion of

01:43

safety shattered with the japanese attack on pearl harbor And

01:46

rather than remain uninvolved in world war i two americans

01:50

decided that they would join the fight against the axis

01:52

powers So b is the right answer In fact the

01:55

american shift from isolationism teo interventionism actually helped turn the

01:59

tide in favor of the allied forces Who needs the

02:02

moon when you've got the force of a rising superpower 00:02:05.9 --> [endTime] right

Related Videos

AP U.S. History Diagnostic 1
424 Views

AP U.S. History Diagnostic 1. Relationships like the one shown in the image resulted in the development of...what?

AP U.S. History Diagnostic 15
260 Views

AP U.S. History Diagnostic 15. How did groups like the ones represented by the image influence industry in America?

AP U.S. History Diagnostic 10
210 Views

AP U.S. History Diagnostic 10. What led to the splintering of the political parties shown in the image?

AP U.S. History Diagnostic 11
185 Views

AP U.S. History Diagnostic 11. The election results shown in the image led to...what?

AP U.S. History Diagnostic 12
205 Views

AP U.S. History Diagnostic 12. How did the Reconstruction Acts open up political opportunities for former slaves?