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The Great Depression Created Modern Politics | Hoover, the Roaring Twenties, and FDR 

Frank DiStefano
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16 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 22   
@dylanpilcheruniverse6515
@dylanpilcheruniverse6515 Год назад
exceptionally underrated
@jamesmcneil8093
@jamesmcneil8093 3 года назад
Most understated channel on RU-vid. The next realignment is Franks popularity.
@FrankDiStefano
@FrankDiStefano 3 года назад
Thanks James. I hope you’re right!
@LinuxUsersAreHung
@LinuxUsersAreHung 3 года назад
This is probably the best and most important series on all of youtube right now.
@FrankDiStefano
@FrankDiStefano 3 года назад
Thank you!
@OJRedd
@OJRedd 4 года назад
I'm so happy you are making this series. Thank you.
@FrankDiStefano
@FrankDiStefano 4 года назад
Thanks for watching!
@ShivamPatel-ey9re
@ShivamPatel-ey9re 3 года назад
I really enjoy this channel. I never thought of american history in such a way. I hope you keep making videos. Im gonna send them to my friends. I imagine some highschool history teachers would really enjoy this as a means to show their students how everything fits together. Even if you dont get alot of views, i really hope you keep it up.
@FrankDiStefano
@FrankDiStefano 3 года назад
Thanks a lot. I really appreciate the comment!
@12KevinPower
@12KevinPower 4 года назад
Awesome! The New Deal Liberalism that survived so well until it collapsed with Richard Nixon’s Landslide in 1972. I would argue that starting from there was a new party system talking about issues such as suburbanization, deindustrialization, and cultural changes.
@FrankDiStefano
@FrankDiStefano 4 года назад
I argue (as most scholars say) we're still in the Fifth Party System New Deal Era now. This is system that's collapsing. What happened between the late 1960s and 1980 was an critical change in politics, but not a realignment. Essentially, we added new social and moral concerns to the pragmatic economic ones of FDR's time like taxes, labor, and regulations. It didn't create a realignment because the core ideologies remained the same. Democrats continued to believe in all the FDR issues and his entire New Deal liberal philosophy, that we can use expertise and planning (meaning progressivism) to benefit working people, the marginalized, and least well off (meaning populism). They simply extended it into new social issues, which of course caused massive changes in the party's tone and demographics. While Republicans continued to fight "big government," but now looked to fight social "big government" alongside economic "big government." The core ideologies thus remained the same. But the knock-off affects were huge. But I'll be talking more about all that in later episodes. And thanks for watching!
@12KevinPower
@12KevinPower 4 года назад
@@FrankDiStefano Interesting Perspective! I still think that there was a major change since there was a dealignment of White Working Class Southern Democrats from the New Deal Coalition. That movement caused a significant shift in the Republican Party favor with the Presidency/Electoral College Politics for the decades to come. Once the Republican Party was the Party of the North/Cities became the Party of the South and Rural/Suburban America. Thanks for the content though! I will be watching more!
@dennisnowak4669
@dennisnowak4669 4 года назад
Great explanation about the ideology of the parties. Can’t wait for the explanation of how this developed into what we have today. Keep up the good work👍🏼👍🏼
@purpledurple621
@purpledurple621 4 года назад
I was waiting for this. Cannot wait for when you talk about modern day. I wonder if you would do a political realignment podcast (know you've been on several podcasts) with people of different political perspectives
@FrankDiStefano
@FrankDiStefano 4 года назад
I'd love to do more podcasts. If you know anyone who would be a good fit, let me know!
@12KevinPower
@12KevinPower 4 года назад
Oddly enough there is already a podcast about today’s realignment. It is called “The Realignment” by Saager Enjeti and Marshall Kosloff. It is on Apple Podcasts. Plus, they talk about it often on the show “Rising” With Krystal Ball.
@12KevinPower
@12KevinPower 4 года назад
They have an interesting discussion about the movement of working class Americans to the Republicans and the upper-middle class to wealthy class to the Democrats.
@LinuxUsersAreHung
@LinuxUsersAreHung 3 года назад
@@12KevinPower I didn't know saager had a podcast about this. Where in the world have I been? Is it anywhere else other than apple podcasts? I'm on the hunt.
@andrelindor1775
@andrelindor1775 5 месяцев назад
You forgot the crisis of 1919 that nobody ever talks about when you listed the different financial crisis
@RavenclawFtW3295
@RavenclawFtW3295 3 месяца назад
"So, Hoover, like a lot of people, naturally assumed that the job was to just wait out the crisis and things would right themselves eventually as it always had before. So, Hoover used the power of his office to try and cushion the blow..." That doesn't make sense the way you put it. If he figured the proper thing to do was to wait it out, then why did he do anything at all? And if the supposed solution was to do what Hoover did but more, then why did the Great Depression last so long even after all this was done?
@andrewhoyle1521
@andrewhoyle1521 3 года назад
I love his videos, however its a BIG stretch to call Herbert Hoover a progressive as of 1929. Also another aspect not much talked about is that the farmers had been living in a kind of depression since the early 20s. Also the bonus army crack down destroyed Hoover's legacy as it should have. It was deplorable. He is a smart and accomplished man, however he did fail to see the significance of the depression.
@FrankDiStefano
@FrankDiStefano 3 года назад
Hoover's reputation is contentious, particularly given how much an entire American generation hated him for the Depression followed by decades of Democratic Party attacks started by FDR, who loathed Hoover personally. Now that the air has cleared a bit, however, there's a lot of newer scholarship reassessing Hoover and his beliefs. For example, I recommend Ken Whyte's Hoover: An Extraordinary Life. I agree with this view that Hoover, like Grant, was in fact better than his reputation suggests. I see Hoover as simply trying to follow with the same progressive beliefs he held throughout his life. I don't think he had some sudden ideological transformation. I think the ground shifted under him, as well as with what "progressive" meant, after FDR. No doubt he wasn't nearly as aggressive as FDR in using government to fight the Depression, but it's important to recognize FDR's was a radical change in direction even for progressives. And while Hoover was clearly pro business, so were most historical progressives. The movement flourished after all among the professional class and the wealthy and was married politically to the McKinley-Coolidge wing of the party. There was conflict between them, as among all political factions in a party, but they still saw themselves as part of the same team. That's my take on it. And thanks for watching!
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