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Period 9: 1980-Present Videos 17 videos
AP U.S. History 3.2 Period 9: 1980-Present. Which choice most directly contributed to the trend in the excerpt?
AP U.S. History 3.5 Period 9: 1980-Present. Which of the following was developed by policymakers to help facilitate the goals behind the 2003 influ...
AP U.S. History 1.1 Period 9: 1980-Present. The success of the Republican Party's fiscal policies in the 1980s and 1990s was accompanied by...what?
AP U.S. History 1.6 Period 9: 1980-Present 185 Views
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Description:
In this AP U.S. History question figure out what the sentiment expressed in the passage relates most strongly to. AP U.S. History: Populism Drill 1, Problem 3
Transcript
- 00:00
[ musical flourish ]
- 00:02
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by light years,
- 00:05
another measurement of non-human aging.
- 00:09
Yeah. You know, remember Buzz? All right.
- 00:10
Check out the excerpt.
Full Transcript
- 00:11
[ mumbles ]
- 00:19
And the question:
- 00:20
The sentiment expressed above relates most strongly to tension between... what...
- 00:25
and what?
- 00:26
Hmm. [ mumbles ]
- 00:30
All right. Okay, so let's figure out the vibe of
- 00:32
what this author is saying.
- 00:34
Take that first sentence.
- 00:36
"Unfortunately, the government has
- 00:38
implemented measures that go light years beyond
- 00:40
anything conceivably necessary to combat terrorism."
- 00:45
Huh. Seems like he's a little twisted up about
- 00:47
that PATRIOT Act, which gave the U.S. government
- 00:49
sweeping powers to monitor individuals
- 00:52
thought to have connections with terrorist threats.
- 00:55
So let's see which answer best describes that push/pull.
- 00:58
All right, does the sentiment in the excerpt
- 01:00
relate most strongly to the tension between A -
- 01:03
the federal government and the states' rights?
- 01:06
Hmm. Well, the debate around national security
- 01:08
sorta transcends arguments about federal versus states' rights,
- 01:12
or the efficiency of the government, for that matter.
- 01:15
So that knocks out A and B.
- 01:17
Is the argument about the limits of government surveillance
- 01:20
related to discussions of D -
- 01:22
interventionism and isolationism?
- 01:26
Hmm. Well we're talking about civil liberties here, and that's
- 01:29
domestic policy, not foreign policy.
- 01:32
So D is out of this particular world.
- 01:34
Which means that the sentiment expressed in the excerpt
- 01:36
most strongly relates to the tension between C -
- 01:39
individual rights and collective security.
- 01:42
Like what's the right of the individual versus the right of the
- 01:45
country to remain free and look strong and all that.
- 01:48
All right, since even before the founding of the country,
- 01:51
there has been tension between individual rights
- 01:53
and collective security.
- 01:55
In the Bill of Rights, the founding fathers listed
- 01:58
civil liberties that the government
- 02:00
could not curtail even if it weakened the security
- 02:03
of the nation as a whole.
- 02:05
Talk about a security blanket.
- 02:07
So C is the right answer.
- 02:08
To the founding fathers,
- 02:10
some things were more important than the nation's safety.
- 02:13
Like wig maintenance.
- 02:15
Yeah. You got any hairspray around here?
- 02:16
Ugh. This thing itches just terribly.
- 02:19
[ whistle ]
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