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US history
The Progressives
The Progressive Era, a time of social reform in America, aimed to tackle issues like poverty, unsafe working conditions, and big business corruption. Progressives believed in societal improvement through government intervention, but their efforts were often limited to those they deemed worthy. Despite internal contradictions, they achieved significant reforms in sanitation, worker protection, women's rights, and more.
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- This may not relate to the video but it does have something to do with the Progressive Era. How did William v Mississippi cause disenfranchisement and how did the Lodge Bill cause the loss of opportunity for voting rights of African Americans?(7 votes)
- The verdict on Williams v. Mississippi stated that voting restrictions like poll taxes and literacy tests (which predominantly effected people of color) were completely constitutional, thus giving states the constitutional authority to disenfranchise the poor and African-American populations of their states.
The Lodge Bill, among other things, would have made literacy tests and poll taxes illegal in elections, and as such its failure to pass in Congress represented a dramatic loss for African American voting rights.(5 votes)
- What does "forced sterilizations" mean?(3 votes)
- To sterilize a person or an animal means to render them unable to produce children. For a male, it means cutting the tubes that allow sperm to get out of the phallus. For a woman it means knotting a string around the tubes that allow an ovum to travel to the uterus where it can, potentially, be fertilized by the sperm of a male.
In general, these procedures are done with the agreement of the person being "sterilized". But in some situations, persons deemed "inferior breeding stock" had these operations done to them without their consent or cooperation,.(7 votes)
- what organization was created to professionalize the medical profession?(3 votes)
- Between 1860 and 1900, medical education was in its infancy. The classical higher education curriculum was not complimenting medicine because they failed to recognize the development of the sciences and social sciences. Admissions standards were incredibly low, and for many medical schools, there wasn’t even a need for a high school diploma. Many medical schools had less preliminary education requirements than theology or law schools, and this was typically because students could not usually afford an undergraduate degree, and then attend medical school. [4] The American Medical Association started influencing the medical education in the 1880s with the introduction of state licensing laws, and it “formed a Committee on Medical Education (CME) as one of its first actions.” [5] It was also in the 1880s that we see a formal entrance requirement, which included written and oral exams for the clinical skills and the classical skills. https://lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu/HistoryofMedicine/uncategorized/development-of-american-medical-education/(5 votes)
- i thought that the 18th amendment didn't ban the consumption of alcohol, just the manufacture/sale of it. wasn't that the major loophole that people took?(3 votes)
- “manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors". Transportation was probably the place they could get you. All you need to do is move a bottle from one location to another.(2 votes)
- Facts about big businesses during the progressive era.(2 votes)
- Are you asking for others to provide you some facts about big businesses during the progressive era? If so, I suggest you do a web search for companies like the Pennsylvania Railroad, the Standard Oil Company, and the United Fruit Company. That'll give you a good start.(3 votes)
- Why are there so many different groups of progressives, like, lots of people agree we should care for all things,(3 votes)
- i thought that the 18th amendment didn't ban the consumption of alcohol, just the manufacture/sale of it. wasn't that the major loophole that people took? 3:19(2 votes)
- Ratified on January 16, 1919, the 18th Amendment prohibited the “manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors". I suppose if you were brewing or distilling your own hooch in your basement, and consumed it right next to the vat, you might have been free from violating the transportation part. But you would have manufactured it. If you were giving it away to people right at the edge of the vat, you'd be OK on the "sale" part, too. But you would still have manufactured it. So, one way or another, unless the stuff made itself and you didn't sell or move it, you'd be in violation of the amendment, and, therefore, of the law.(3 votes)
- What does "forced sterilizations" mean?(2 votes)
- It refers to surgical procedures performed on the sexual reproduction systems of persons who had been assumed to be undesirable as parents. Women had their fallopian tubes tied or ovaries removed, men had the ducts through which their sperm exited their testes cut and tied. But, these procedures were done WITHOUT the permission of the persons whose bodies were mutilated.(2 votes)
- when did black woman get the right to vote(2 votes)
- Black women got the right to vote at the same time that white women did. BUT, that right was denied to black women living in a large geographical region of the nation until the 1960s.(2 votes)
- Atshe talks about fighters and reformers of labor protection and unions. Is this the same as Unions such as the American Federation of Labor or Knights of Labor or is this separate? 2:15(3 votes)
- I do not think so. I think it is something different but that is a good question.(0 votes)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] After the Civil War there were enormous
changes in American life. With industrialization, urbanization, and immigration changing
the composition of who lived in the United States, where they lived, and what they did for a living. But city living and
factory work came with new social problems like
poverty and unsafe working and living conditions. The rise of big business
had also led to practices that limited competition, like
monopolies and price fixing. Starting in the 1890s
a number of reformers began to advocate for remedies
to these social problems. They were known as the Progressives. This era of reform, which
lasted through the 1920s, has come to be known
as the Progressive Era. But the difficult thing
about the Progressive Era was that these reformers
worked on all sorts of different things. There were muckrakers,
which were journalists, writers, and photographers
who tried to expose corruption or unsanitary
factory practices. There were politicians
who tried to reign in big businesses and protect consumers. There were conservationists
who tried to preserve national parks and
wilderness from exploitation. And there many influential
female reformers who tried to help women,
children, and immigrants achieve better working
and living conditions. So clearly Progressives didn't
all share the same goals or advocate for the same
solutions to problems. How can we even compare
the goals and effects of the Progressive reformers
when they were so diverse? Let's start by taking a
look at some of the goals and achievements of the Progressives. Now, I'm not gonna go into a lot of detail about individual reformers or
pieces of legislation here. What I'm interested in doing
is taking a birds eye view of the kinds of reforms
that Progressives pursued during this time period. First, there were those who
advocated for sanitation and consumer protections
like Upton Sinclair, whose novel The Jungle exposed
the unsanitary conditions in factories that made food products. The outrage that book
generated led to the passage of laws like the Pure
Food and Drug Act of 1906. Then there were the
Progressives who fought for protections for workers. They pushed for an eight hour workday and for safer conditions for workers, along with the right for workers to bargain collectively through unions. Along with those reforms were others aimed at advancing the rights
of women and children, including limiting child
labor, promoting access to birth control, and granting
women the right to vote through the 19th Amendment. Many of the Progressive
reformers were interested in reining in the
excesses of big business. Politicians, like
President Teddy Roosevelt, went after trusts and monopolies for stifling competition
and fixing prices. Another avenue of reform
was aimed at limiting political corruption, particularly
city political machines that were dominated by party bosses. One victory in this arena was the passage of the 17th Amendment, which provided for the popular election of senators. Lastly, there was a push for moral reform to make society more orderly and humane. The major achievement of these reformers was the passage of the 18th Amendment, which prohibited the sale
or consumption of alcohol. Okay, so now that we've
done a brief survey of what the Progressives were up to, let's think about what
aspects these reformers had in common with each other, and where they differed with
or contradicted each other. So this might sound a little obvious, but one thing that united the Progressives was that they believed in progress. That is, they thought it was
possible to improve society and to make people better human beings. This is worth mentioning
just because not everyone felt that this was possible. Many of the opponents of the Progressives saw human nature as
fixed and a society with vast inequalities of
wealth and opportunity is just an inevitable
consequence of industrialization. A second shared belief
was that it was the role of government to step in and
fix these social problems. This was a big departure
from the laissez-faire or hands off approach of the Gilded Age. In that era, attempting
to improve sanitation or morality would have been considered work for private charities or voluntary associations to take on. But the Progressives
thought that the problems they were trying to solve were
too big for that approach. And they sought out the
help of local, state, and federal government to
implement their measures. They campaigned for laws and
constitutional amendments to bring about change. So they really began a debate over whether or to what extent the government
should take an active role in the welfare of its
citizens that would continue into the Great Depression. But the Progressive
Movement was also riddled with divisions and
internal contradictions. One of these was around voting rights. The Progressives expanded
democracy by winning the right to vote for women, but they also advocated
for restricting the vote to who they considered good voters. White, educated, native-born people. They worked to impose literacy tests and residency requirements in the North, and made no effort to
challenge Jim Crow Laws preventing African Americans
from voting in the South. Progressives were also divided
on the issue of immigration. Although a few Progressives
championed the rights of immigrants and respect
for immigrant's culture like Hull-House founder, Jane Addams, most Progressives thought the only way forward for immigrants
was complete assimilation into American culture. They also supported
restrictions on the entry of immigrants they considered undesirable, like those from Southern
and Eastern Europe, Asia, and Mexico. These beliefs around who was fit to vote or to be an American citizen derived from the flawed racial science of the day, which categorized white
Anglo-Saxons as the most evolved race, and everyone
else falling somewhere along a continuum of less evolved peoples. With the exception of
African American activists, like Ida B. Wells, Progressive
reformers supported segregation and pretty
much turned a blind eye towards the working and living conditions of African Americans. Some Progressives even advocated eugenics, a plan to improve the American gene pool by encouraging native white
women to have more babies, and discouraging undesirables
from reproducing, sometimes through forced sterilizations. So taking these uniting
and dividing factors into consideration what
conclusions can we come to about the goals and effects of the Progressive reform movement? I think it's safe to say
that the Progressives wanted to improve
society and find a remedy for the social problems caused by industrialization and urbanization. And that they wanted to do so through government intervention. But their goals were also limited. They only wanted these
improvements for those they deemed worthy to
participate in American society. As for how effective their
reforms were at solving the problems of industrialization
and urbanization, they did succeed in curbing
some of the worst problems of corruption, sanitation,
and exploitation. But we would also need to look ahead to the '20s and '30s to see how much things really changed. Spoiler alert, this
booming era of industry was about to end with a crash.