Obamanation: Crash Course US History #47 - YouTube

Channel: CrashCourse

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Hi, I’m John Green, this is CrashCourse U.S. history and we’ve finally done it,
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we’ve reached the end of history!
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Ahh.
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Stan, says that history never ends but whatever we’ve reached the part that Me From the
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Present is in.
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So we aren’t going to cover the astonishing results of the 2016 presidential election.
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What we are going to do is try to talk about historical events that are also current events.
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Future John Green here to tell you that in a stunning turn of events the 2020 presidential
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election will be won by - Harry Styles.
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I know that he’s English and under 35 but we’re going to change the constitution to
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make it possible.
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Because
 that’s how much we love Harry Styles in 2020.
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Intro So when we last left George W Bush, his approval
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rating was dropping to the lowest number in President of the United States approval rating
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history.
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And the U.S. was facing what turned out to be the 2nd worst economic crises in the past
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150 years.
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A crisis that remains unnamed because we’re kind of still in it.
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But I’d like to propose a couple names: the Wall Street Wamboozle, the Financial Fartstorm.
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However, knowing historians they will inevitably call it like The Major Recession of 2008 - 2012.
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Booooo!
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So what caused the Financial Fartstorm that began in late 2008?
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Well, it was a mixture of public and private activities that tilted towards short-term
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economic thinking, speculation and irresponsible spending.
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First, there are the Federal Reserve’s policies of keeping interest rates freakishly low in
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response to the 2001-2002 recession.
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Now, this worked, but the recession ended and interest rates stayed low.
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And this, combined with unscrupulous mortgage lenders, encouraged people to buy houses that
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they could not afford.
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In the early 2000s, many millions of Americans, including certain Crash Course US History
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hosts, bought real estate assuming that its value would increase rapidly and forever,
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so that when you were unable to make payments, you’d just sell it, pay off the mortgage,
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and make a tidy profit.
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It turns out this was essentially a pyramid scheme and, my friends, I was not at the top
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of the pyramid.
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So back then you could buy a house with a so-called NINJA loan which sadly this did
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not involve mutant ninja turtles or pizza.
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Ninja stands for No Income, No Job, and No Assets.
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Traditionally, people in this situation can’t borrow hundreds of thousands of dollars, but
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in the early 2000’s, these loans were giving the benign sounding designation “subprime.”
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So it’s important to understand that it wasn’t just like big Wall Street banks financing
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huge deals with debt, regular people were doing it - like me.
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All this created a classic housing bubble, which was doomed to burst.
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Also, with the interest on government Treasury Bills effectively zero, investors had to look
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elsewhere for better returns, which led to the idea of issuing securities – these bond-like
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instruments that were backed by mortgages.
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The thinking was that the interest people paid on their mortgages would supply the underlying
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value of the security, the way that like tax revenues are the source of value of a government
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bond.
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Now of course there’d be a minority of people who’d fail to pay off their securitised
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mortgages, but most people would pay because, you know, they’d want to keep their houses.
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But it turns out that if you haven’t paid any money to own your house, you don’t feel
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all that invested in it.
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Now there are even more reasons why these securities were terrible ideas, but the important
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thing is that when the mortgages turned bad, these securities became toxic assets.
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Basically, the people who held them suddenly didn’t know what they were worth if anything
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and banks overreacted to this uncertainty as banks like to do by not lending out any
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money.
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And that’s called a credit freeze, which is very bad.
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So that’s how a housing bubble turned into a full-fledged financial crisis.
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Alright Let’s go to the ThoughtBubble.
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When banks stop lending, business can’t function.
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So the stock market collapsed, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropping from above
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14,000 to around 8,000 which wiped out about $7trillion of shareholder wealth.
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And a majority of Americans had money invested in the stock market, much of it in the form
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of retirement funds.
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With it being harder to borrow money, Americans finally cut back on their spending, which
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resulted in many businesses failing and by the end of 2008, 2.5 million jobs had been
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lost, many of which were in manufacturing and construction.
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And because those were both male-dominated fields, it led to another change, by mid-2009
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more women than men held paying jobs for the first time in American history.
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In the last three months of 2008 and the first three months of 2009 our GDP dropped 6%.
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And World Trade cratered and that led to unemployment and misery worldwide.
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The event that triggered the chaos was the failure of the investment bank Lehman Brothers
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in September, just 2 months before the presidential election.
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The Bush Administration tried to stop the damage by getting Congress to pass the Troubled
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Assets Relief Program, or TARP, which was basically a $700 billion bailout for banks
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like Citigroup and Bank of America, insurance companies like AIG and mortgage insurers Fannie
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Mae and Freddie Mac.
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Regular individuals also received tarps, but they had to buy them and they weren’t as
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cool.
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Anyway, these bailouts were probably necessary to stop a complete failure of the financial
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system but they were very unpopular.
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Most of the banks that received a rescue from the taxpayers didn’t help the homeowners
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facing foreclosure, and despite receiving millions of federal dollars, AIG continued
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to pay huge bonuses to its top executives.
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Thanks, Thoughtbubble.
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So, the end of the Bush years looked a lot like the end of the Hoover years.
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After a decade of Americans spending more than they had, government taking a back seat
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to business interests and deregulation of industries going hand in hand with increasing
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corruption, Barack Obama was faced with America’s biggest economic challenge since the Great
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Depression.
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Oh, by the way, we got a new president, Barack Obama, who 50 years before his election couldn’t
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have sat in the front of a bus in Alabama.
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So I know all the green parts of not-America are mad at us for causing the great financial
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meltdown and whatever, and fair enough, but we do make some progress now and again
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Barack Obama was young, he was relatively new on the national scene, and represented
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change.
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He appealed to young people and minorities, and he harnessed the power of social media
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to communicate with supporters, and get out the vote, and also raise TONS of money.
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Also, he was on the cover of US Weekly.
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You didn’t see Martin Van Buren on the cover of US Weekly.
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What’s that?
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It didn’t exist?
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Of course it existed!
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In 2008 Obama’s election At the time Obama’s election seemed a political watershed and
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not just because he was the first African American president.
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He appeared to break Republicans’ solid hold on the south, he won Virginia, and North
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Carolina and Florida, and his supporters represented a coalition of African Americans, and Hispanics,
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white liberals and, especially, young people.
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Oh, it’s time for the mystery document?
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I hope it’s from that US Weekly profile.
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The rules here are simple - he said for the final time.
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I’ll tell you one thing that’s going to change here at Crash Course, no more shock
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pens.
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I guess the author of the Mystery Document, if I’m wrong I get shocked.
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Alright, let’s see what we got here today.
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“For everywhere we look, there is work to be done.
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The state of our economy calls for action, bold and swift.
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And we will act, not only to create new jobs, but to lay a new foundation for growth.
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We will build the roads and bridges, the electric grids and digital lines that feed our commerce
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and bind us together.
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We’ll restore science to its rightful place, and wield technology’s wonders to raise
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health care’s quality and lower its cost.
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We will harness the sun and the winds and the soil to fuel our cars and run our factories.
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And we will transform our schools and colleges and universities to meet the demands of a
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new age.
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All this we can do.
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All this we will do.”
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Speaking of things that we will do, I will get this right it’s Barack Obama’s first
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inaugural!
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Ba-bam!
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No more shocks.
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The getting shocked part of my life has come to an end.
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Hopefully in Crash Course Literature when I get things right I’ll get a puppy and
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when I get things wrong I’ll get a rainbow!
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Stan says that my only reward is not being punished.
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So Obama promised to change the culture of Washington.
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He would end partisan squabbling
. sorry I couldn’t even get through that sentence.
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To be fair, he did end the squabbling, it became full blown yelling.
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He also wanted a foreign policy based on diplomacy, he wanted to reduce inequality and increase
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access to health care, he wanted to curb “greed and irresponsibility” that had helped bring
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on the economic crisis, and he wanted to end the Bush tax cuts.
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He also wanted to end the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and, as critics mocked, reverse
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global warming.
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That’s a tall order So how has he done?
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Not bad.
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Well, some would say not great either.
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For instance he launched diplomatic outreach to the Muslim world, but a lot of this was
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more rhetoric than action, as in his verbal support for the revolution that overthrew
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Hosni Mubarak in Egypt.
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And he did keep some of his campaign promises, for instance he signed into law the Lily Ledbetter
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Fair Pay Act, which made it easier for women to sue when they had been systemically underpaid
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and he also reversed an earlier executive order that limited women’s reproductive
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rights.
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And speaking of women he appointed two of them to the Supreme Court, Elena Kagan and
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Sonia Sotomayor, the court’s first Hispanic melmber.
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He also followed through on his promise to end the war in Iraq, although to be fair the
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Bush administration had really set him up for success there.
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And he increased the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan as part of a longer term plan
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to end the war there, which has sort of worked?
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He also authorized a successful military operation that killed Osama bin Laden on May 2, 2011.
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I was in Amsterdam at the time, and the Dutch media came to my house to ask me how Americans
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felt about this and I said, “Good!”
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On the other hand Obama has been criticized internationally for backing off his promise
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to close the Guantanamo Bay detention camp, and he has largely followed the Bush administration's
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policies with the war on terror.
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But the Obama administration has deployed far more unmanned drones to kill suspected
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militants around the world.
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Despite provoking outrage on the left and the right, Americans generally appear to support
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the use of drones and extra-legal assassination of accused terrorists.
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Obama also kept in place Bush’s executive power and in fact expanded it in some ways
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with NSA’s PRISM program.
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What about that financial mess he inherited?
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Well, Obama was fortunate to have a Democratic Congress for his first term in office, so
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he could push through a lot of legislation.
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This included a sweeping stimulus package with nearly $800 Billion in new spending,
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most of it on infrastructure, that was signed into law on February 17, 2009, just 28 days
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into Obama’s presidency.
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In the end, the recovery act cost $787 billion - more than the government had spent on a
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package of programs ever.
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More than the Great Society.
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More than the New Deal.
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Did it work,?
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Well it depends on who you ask.
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Among 9 large studies, 6 found that the stimulus did have a positive effect on growth and employment,
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3 found that it had little or no effect, and economists are equally divided.
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The stimulus is estimated to have saved about 3 million jobs, but it also increased the
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deficit quite a bit.
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So Liberal economists see America’s current 7% unemployment rate as evidence that the
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stimulus’ Keynesian policies should have gone further, while conservatives say that
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the stimulus exploded the federal deficit and debt.
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Regardless, the recovery for the past few years has been steady, but quite slow.
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Lastly, let’s turn to Obama’s signature policy proposal the Affordable Care Act, better
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known as Obamacare.
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The Affordable Care Act is arguably the most significant piece of social legislation since
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Medicare.
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And it seeks to move the United States into the ranks of countries with universal health
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care.
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A list that includes every industrialized nation on Earth.
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We’re number one among countries that don’t have universal health care.
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So Obamacare aims to reduce the number of Americans without health insurance by making
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it easier and less expensive for the uninsured to buy it privately.
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It’s not a government insurance plan and the government will subsidize those who can’t
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afford insurance.
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That’s going to be expensive, but fortunately our health care system is so astonishly inefficient
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that there are lots of places to save money and the Congressional Budget Office at least
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thinks it’s going to be a wash.
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But controversially, the acts insurance mandate means that if you don’t have insurance from
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your employer you MUST buy it or else you have to pay a penalty.
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In 2012 the core of the law was upheld by the Supreme Court when they ruled that thiants
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was a constitutional use of the government’s taxing power.
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As for Obama’s success at ending partisan politics, not one Congressional Republican
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voted for Obamacare, and many used it to campaign against Democrats in the 2010 mid-term elections.
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And while the success of the Affordable Care Act won’t be able to be determined for many
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years there was a huge backlash against both Obama and his policies, on Facebook, and Twitter,
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and also the mysterious world of non-the-Internet One of these responses was The Tea Party,
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a reference to the Boston Tea Party and an acronym for Taxed Enough Already.
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For the record, I just want to say that the vast majority of American’s taxes are lower
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now than they have been at any point in the last one hundred years.
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But the Tea Party is also very concerned that deficits are out of control and that rising
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government spending is going to ruin America.
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Bolstered by 80 or so new Tea Party congresspeople, the Republicans took control of the House
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in 2010 and John, it’s pronounced, Boehner became the Speaker of The House.
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All these Tea Party freshmen took their mandate to cut taxes and reduce spending very seriously,
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and that made it difficult for Boehner to compromise with the Obama administration.
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Over in the Senate, Democrats held a slim majority, but because of the filibuster needed
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60 votes to do anything, which made them look very dysfunctional
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In fact, the 111th congress was one of the least productive in American history.
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Obama was re-elected president in 2012, the Republicans continued to control The House,
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the Democrats continued to have slim majority in the Senate, and now America is facing something
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of a political crisis.
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Unwillingness to compromise precipitated a series of mini-fiscal crises over things like
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the budget and raising the debt ceiling.
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Things that Congress used to be able to hash out back when their business was governing
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not ideological rigidity.
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Meanwhile, the economy has slowly added jobs and looks halfway decent at the moment mostly
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because Europe looks so bad.
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Yay?
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That qualified questioning yay is about the last word I have to say on American history.
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The particular brands of ideological certainty that we see today may seem new but if you
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look at American history you realize that this has been going on for a long time.
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The Tea Party is right that the founding fathers would be astonished by the extend of the American
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government and the extent to which it’s involved in the lives of Americans.
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And progressives are right that people around the world have benefited from government investment
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in healthcare and infrastructure and transportation.
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We have to ask ourselves again, “What does freedom really mean?”
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Can you be free when you live in poverty or when you’re one injury away from bankruptcy?
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Can you be free when the government can go to a secret court to read your text messages?
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We know that you can’t be free if you’re dead, so is the government’s job to protect
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you not only by having a standing army but also making you wear your seat belt?
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Those are ultimately ideological questions, but we have to grapple with them in a real
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practical way.
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And the great story of American governance is compromise.
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But that is also often been the tragedy of American governance as when the Constitutional
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Convention compromised over whether African American people were people.
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So if you’ve learned anything this year, I hope its been that the American story that
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we find ourselves in now isn’t entirely novel.
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And I think we have much to learn from those who came before us, both from their successes
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and their many, many failures.
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Thank you so much for watching Crash Course US History next we will be discussing literature.
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Your first reading assignment The Odyssey.
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It’s a great book, I promise, you’re gonna like it.
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Thanks again for watching.
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I’ll see ya then.
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Crash Course US History is made with the help of all of these nice people and it exists
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because of your continuing support through Subbable.com.
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There is a link right there that you can click to voluntarily subscribe and keep this show,
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you know, rolling.
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Thank you, so much, to everyone that has watched and supported this show over the last two
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years.
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I’m wearing the same shirt that I wore on the 1st episode of Crash Course World History
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to celebrate two successful years of teaching history!
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This has been one of the great professional joys of my life and I’m so grateful to everyone
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that has helped make the show and everyone who has watched it.
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You can find a full list of your reading for Crash Course Literature in the doobly-doo.
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Thank you again for watching, and as we say in my hometown, “Don’t forget to be awesome