YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :American Presidents Who Were the Most Influential
Essays 871 - 900
Peace Without Victory speech. Nordholt (1991) reflects a president who was adamant about creating a world where alliance was "the...
open society where mankind was neither chained to the past nor condemned to a deterministic future" (Woo, 1995, p. 01B). Perhaps ...
than apparent is the fact that South Korea will have imposed tariffs but Mexico and Canada will not. Such favoritism does not bod...
Each side was consistently successful in resolving its problems in politics, civil morale, and economics when its military was vic...
much of that time was spent training them. By the time the training was completed, there was little time left to use the militia o...
In four pages this paper discusses President George W. Bush's justification of the war with Iraq in a consideration of the hypothe...
that can control things such a taxes. They are also involved in appointments to economic posts, such as Secretary of the Treasury ...
authority in this area. While they are technically supposed to get Congressional approval to declare war, the facts show that over...
Taxpayers suffer because they have to foot the welfare bill to support those who are out of work. Secondly, the health care cris...
that they should work to promote various social policies. Eleanor Roosevelt was a controversial first lady, and was perhaps the fi...
plan was due to fail on several fronts. First the plan itself was way too broad - and way too much for...
sections of Tokyo. By July of 1945, Japan was ready to surrender, but feared, because of Roosevelts insistence on unconditional su...
the airwaves these days. But for the times (and in examining the history), the radio rhetoric of the 1920s and 1930s was quite str...
economy (Grier and Jonsson, 2004). These days, some of the programs continue - one of them being Medicare (Grier and Jonsso...
in this regard. Although as we shall see there are some temporary exceptions, the legislative branch typically approves o...
priority in U.S. foreign policy nor one which will occupy our immediate future. To fortify his contention, Lozado notes the speed...
brinks of despair and back onto its feet. Conditions in the U.S. were so bad it was estimated that over 100,000 American citizens...
20). The premise is that both the workers and their employers would benefit from such a policy (p. 20). Cooper (2004) adds that th...
thinking of Abraham Lincoln (The Peeping Moe, 2003). Lincoln faced the secession of states from the union; he determined to keep a...
are not connected by the bonds of being anything but themselves" (Babyak, 1995). His contention was that inasmuch as words were v...
to think much of President Reagan. In fact, he says that Reagan gave the people "a sense of direction and moral purpose, but not o...
his second term (Bush and Brady, 2004). This is because the move swept away the last vestiges of the Boris Yeltsin administration...
his second term in office (Gwertzman, 2004). Walter Russell Mead, a respected historian, claims that the election was "a turning p...
Trade theory alternatives and the 2000 economic report of US President Bill Clinton are examined in a paper consisting of five pag...
place to sleep and food to eat. While the stereotypical liberal democrat may appear to be kinder, the Republican side defends its ...
as well as the position of the democratic party. The macroeconomic problems the economy might experience in the next 5 years see...
whole, Johnson followed other advisers more closely than he did Russell. Russells advice, like the situation itself, was frequentl...
(Garrison, 1988). Garrisons book chronicles his investigation into what was perhaps the most notable murder case in America. Gar...
certain degree of sympathy with Iraq and its leaders, regardless of how barbarian those leaders have proven themselves time and ti...
the historical context of the second Gulf War to support their arguments. Since the end of World War II, US defense and foreign p...