Contents:
|A brief history of the USA | | |The colonial era |1 | |A new
nation |2 | |Slavery and The Civil War |2 | |The late 19th century
|3 | |The progressive moment |4 | |War and peace |4 | |The great
depression |5 | |World War II |5 | |The Cold War |6 | |Decades of
change |7 | |Geography and regional characteristics | | |Short
facts |8 | |Regional Variety |10 | |New England |10 | |Middle
Atlantic |11 | |The South |11 | |The Midwest |12 | |The Southwest
|12 | |The West |13 | |The Frontier Spirit |13 | |A responsive
government | | |The constitution |14 | |Bill of Rights |15 |
|Legislative Branch |16 | |Executive Branch |16 | |Juridical Branch
|16 | |The court of last resort |17 | |Political parties and
elections |17 |
Source: http://usinfo.state.gov/usa/infousa/facts/factover A brief
history of the United States. The first Europeans to reach North
America were Icelandic Vikings, led by Leif Ericson, about the year
1000. Traces of their visit have been found in the Canadian
province of Newfoundland, but the Vikings failed to establish a
permanent settlement and soon lost contact with the new continent.
Five centuries later, the demand for Asian spices, textiles, and
dyes spurred European navigators to dream of shorter routes between
East and West. Acting on behalf of the Spanish crown, in 1492 the
Italian navigator Christopher Columbus sailed west from Europe and
landed on one of the Bahama Islands in the Caribbean Sea. Within 40
years, Spanish adventurers had carved out a huge empire in Central
and South America.
THE COLONIAL ERA The first successful English colony was founded at
Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607. A few years later, English Puritans
came to America to escape religious persecution for their
opposition to the Church of England. In 1620, the Puritans founded
Plymouth Colony in what later became Massachusetts. Plymouth was
the second permanent British settlement in North America and the
first in New England. In New England the Puritans hoped to build a
"city upon a hill" -- an ideal community. Ever since, Americans
have viewed their country as a great experiment, a worthy model for
other nations to follow. The Puritans believed that government
should enforce God's morality, and they strictly punished heretics,
adulterers, drunks, and violators of the Sabbath. In spite of their
own quest for religious freedom, the Puritans practiced a form of
intolerant moralism. In 1636 an English clergyman named Roger
Williams left Massachusetts and founded the colony of Rhode Island,
based on the principles of religious freedom and separation of
church and state, two ideals that were later adopted by framers of
the U.S. Constitution. Colonists arrived from other European
countries, but the English were far better established in America.
By 1733 English settlers had founded 13 colonies along the Atlantic
Coast, from New Hampshire in the North to Georgia in the South.
Elsewhere in North America, the French controlled Canada and
Louisiana, which included the vast Mississippi River watershed.
France and England fought several wars during the 18th century,
with North America being drawn into every one. The end of the Seven
Years' War in 1763 left England in control of Canada and all of
North America east of the Mississippi. Soon afterwards England and
its colonies were in conflict. The mother country imposed new
taxes, in part to defray the cost of fighting the Seven Years' War,
and expected Americans to lodge British soldiers in their homes.
The colonists resented the taxes and resisted the quartering of
soldiers. Insisting that they could be taxed only by their own
colonial assemblies, the colonists rallied behind the slogan "no
taxation without representation." All the taxes, except one on tea,
were removed, but in 1773 a group of patriots responded by staging
the Boston Tea Party. Disguised as Indians, they boarded British
merchant ships and dumped 342 crates of tea into Boston harbor.
This provoked a crackdown by the British Parliament, including the
closing of Boston harbor to shipping. Colonial leaders convened the
First Continental Congress in 1774 to discuss the colonies'
opposition to British rule. War broke out on April 19, 1775, when
British soldiers confronted colonial rebels in Lexington,
Massachusetts. On July 4, 1776, the Continental Congress adopted a
Declaration of Independence.
At first the Revolutionary War went badly for the Americans. With
few provisions and little training, American troops generally
fought well, but were outnumbered and overpowered by the British.
The turning point in the war came in 1777 when American soldiers
defeated the British Army at Saratoga, New York. France had
secretly been aiding the Americans, but was reluctant to ally
itself openly until they had proved themselves in battle. Following
the Americans' victory at Saratoga, France and America signed
treaties of alliance, and France provided the Americans with troops
and warships. The last major battle of the American Revolution took
place at Yorktown, Virginia, in 1781. A combined force of American
and French troops surrounded the British and forced their
surrender. Fighting continued in some areas for two more years, and
the war officially ended with the Treaty of Paris in 1783, by which
England recognized American independence.
A NEW NATION The framing of the U.S. Constitution and the creation
of the United States are covered in more detail in chapter 4. In
essence, the Constitution alleviated Americans' fear of excessive
central power by dividing government into three branches --
legislative (Congress), executive (the president and the federal
agencies), and judicial (the federal courts) -- and by including 10
amendments known as the Bill of Rights to safeguard individual
liberties. Continued uneasiness about the accumulation of power
manifested itself in the differing political philosophies of two
towering figures from the Revolutionary period. George Washington,
the war's military hero and the first U.S. president, headed a
party favoring a strong president and central government; Thomas
Jefferson, the principal author of the Declaration of Independence,
headed a party preferring to allot more power to the states, on the
theory that they would be more accountable to the people. Jefferson
became the third president in 1801. Although he had intended to
limit the president's power, political realities dictated
otherwise. Among other forceful actions, in 1803 he purchased the
vast Louisiana Territory from France, almost doubling the size of
the United States. The Louisiana Purchase added more than 2 million
square kilometers of territory and extended the country's borders
as far west as the Rocky Mountains in Colorado.
SLAVERY AND THE CIVIL WAR In the first quarter of the 19th century,
the frontier of settlement moved west to the Mississippi River and
beyond. In 1828 Andrew Jackson became the first "outsider" elected
president: a man from the frontier state of Tennessee, born into a
poor family and outside the cultural traditions of the Atlantic
seaboard. Although on the surface the Jacksonian Era was one of
optimism and energy, the young nation was entangled in a
contradiction. The ringing words of the Declaration of
Independence, "all men are created equal," were meaningless for 1.5
million slaves. (For more on slavery and its aftermath, see
chapters 1 and 4.) In 1820 southern and northern politicians
debated the question of whether slavery would be legal in the
western territories. Congress reached a compromise: Slavery was
permitted in the new state of Missouri and the Arkansas Territory
but barred everywhere west and north of Missouri. The outcome of
the Mexican War of 1846-48 brought more territory into American
hands -- and with it the issue of whether to extend slavery.
Another compromise, in 1850, admitted California as a free state,
with the citizens of Utah and New Mexico being allowed to decide
whether they wanted slavery within their borders or not (they did
not). But the issue continued to rankle. After Abraham Lincoln, a
foe of slavery, was elected president in 1860, 11 states left the
Union and proclaimed themselves an independent nation, the
Confederate States of America: South Carolina, Mississippi,
Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Texas, Virginia, Arkansas,
Tennessee, and North Carolina. The American Civil War had begun.
The Confederate Army did well in the early part of the war, and
some of its commanders, especially General Robert E. Lee, were
brilliant tacticians. But the Union had superior manpower and
resources to draw upon. In the summer of 1863 Lee took a gamble by
marching his troops north into Pennsylvania. He met a Union army at
Gettysburg, and the largest battle ever fought on American soil
ensued. After three days of desperate fighting, the Confederates
were defeated. At the same time, on the Mississippi River, Union
General Ulysses S. Grant captured the city of Vicksburg, giving the
North control of the entire Mississippi Valley and splitting the
Confederacy in two. Two years later, after a long campaign
involving forces commanded by Lee and Grant, the Confederates
surrendered. The Civil War was the most traumatic episode in
American history. But it resolved two matters that had vexed
Americans since 1776. It put an end to slavery, and it decided that
the country was not a collection of semi-independent states but an
indivisible whole.
THE LATE 19TH CENTURY Abraham Lincoln was assassinated in 1865,
depriving America of a leader uniquely qualified by background and
temperament to heal the wounds left by the Civil War. His
successor, Andrew Johnson, was a southerner who had remained loyal
to the Union during the war. Northern members of Johnson's own
party (Republican) set in motion a process to remove him from
office for allegedly acting too leniently toward former
Confederates. Johnson's acquittal was an important victory for the
principle of separation of powers: A president should not be
removed from office because Congress disagrees with his policies,
but only if he has committed, in the words of the Constitution,
"treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors." Within a
few years after the end of the Civil War, the United States became
a leading industrial power, and shrewd businessmen made great
fortunes. The first transcontinental railroad was completed in
1869; by 1900 the United States had more rail mileage than all of
Europe. The petroleum industry prospered, and John D. Rockefeller
of the Standard Oil Company became one of the richest men in
America. Andrew Carnegie, who started out as a poor Scottish
immigrant, built a vast empire of steel mills. Textile mills
multiplied in the South, and meat-packing plants sprang up in
Chicago, Illinois. An electrical industry flourished as Americans
made use of a series of inventions: the telephone, the light bulb,
the phonograph, the alternating-current motor and transformer,
motion pictures. In Chicago, architect Louis Sullivan used
steel-frame construction to fashion America's distinctive
contribution to the modern city: the skyscraper. But unrestrained
economic growth brought dangers. To limit competition, railroads
merged and set standardized shipping rates. Trusts -- huge
combinations of corporations -- tried to establish monopoly control
over some industries, notably oil. These giant enterprises could
produce goods efficiently and sell them cheaply, but they could
also fix prices and destroy competitors. To counteract them, the
federal government took action. The Interstate Commerce Commission
was created in 1887 to control railroad rates. The Sherman
Antitrust Act of 1890 banned trusts, mergers, and business
agreements "in restraint of trade." Industrialization brought with
it the rise of organized labor. The American Federation of Labor,
founded in 1886, was a coalition of trade unions for skilled
laborers. The late 19th century was a period of heavy immigration,
and many of the workers in the new industries were foreign- born.
For American farmers, however, times were hard. Food prices were
falling, and farmers had to bear the costs of high shipping rates,
expensive mortgages, high taxes, and tariffs on consumer goods.
With the exception of the purchase of Alaska from Russia in 1867,
American territory had remained fixed since 1848. In the 1890s a
new spirit of expansion took hold. The United States followed the
lead of northern European nations in asserting a duty to "civilize"
the peoples of Asia, Africa, and Latin America. After American
newspapers published lurid accounts of atrocities in the Spanish
colony of Cuba, the United States and Spain went to war in 1898.
When the war was over, the United States had gained a number of
possessions from Spain: Cuba, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and
Guam. In an unrelated action, the United States also acquired the
Hawaiian Islands. Yet Americans, who had themselves thrown off the
shackles of empire, were not comfortable with administering one. In
1902 American troops left Cuba, although the new republic was
required to grant naval bases to the United States. The Philippines
obtained limited self-government in 1907 and complete independence
in 1946. Puerto Rico became a self-governing commonwealth within
the United States, and Hawaii became a state in 1959 (as did
Alaska).
THE PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT While Americans were venturing abroad,
they were also taking a fresh look at social problems at home.
Despite the signs of prosperity, up to half of all industrial
workers still lived in poverty. New York, Boston, Chicago, and San
Francisco could be proud of their museums, universities, and public
libraries -- and ashamed of their slums. The prevailing economic
dogma had been laissez faire: let the government interfere with
commerce as little as possible. About 1900 the Progressive Movement
arose to reform society and individuals through government action.
The movement's supporters were primarily economists, sociologists,
technicians, and civil servants who sought scientific,
cost-effective solutions to political problems. Social workers went
into the slums to establish settlement houses, which provided the
poor with health services and recreation. Prohibitionists demanded
an end to the sale of liquor, partly to prevent the suffering that
alcoholic husbands inflicted on their wives and children. In the
cities, reform politicians fought corruption, regulated public
transportation, and built municipally owned utilities. States
passed laws restricting child labor, limiting workdays, and
providing compensation for injured workers. Some Americans favored
more radical ideologies. The Socialist Party, led by Eugene V.
Debs, advocated a peaceful, democratic transition to a state- run
economy. But socialism never found a solid footing in the United
States -- the party's best showing in a presidential race was 6
percent of the vote in 1912.
WAR AND PEACE When World War I erupted in Europe in 1914, President
Woodrow Wilson urged a policy of strict American neutrality.
Germany's declaration of unrestricted submarine warfare against all
ships bound for Allied ports undermined that position. When
Congress declared war on Germany in 1917, the American army was a
force of only 200,000 soldiers. Millions of men had to be drafted,
trained, and shipped across the submarine-infested Atlantic. A full
year passed before the U.S. Army was ready to make a significant
contribution to the war effort. By the fall of 1918, Germany's
position had become hopeless. Its armies were retreating in the
face of a relentless American buildup. In October Germany asked for
peace, and an armistice was declared on November 11. In 1919 Wilson
himself went to Versailles to help draft the peace treaty. Although
he was cheered by crowds in the Allied capitals, at home his
international outlook was less popular. His idea of a League of
Nations was included in the Treaty of Versailles, but the U.S.
Senate did not ratify the treaty, and the United States did not
participate in the league. The majority of Americans did not mourn
the defeated treaty. They turned inward, and the United States
withdrew from European affairs. At the same time, Americans were
becoming hostile to foreigners in their midst. In 1919 a series of
terrorist bombings produced the "Red Scare." Under the authority of
Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer, political meetings were raided
and several hundred foreign-born political radicals were deported,
even though most of them were innocent of any crime. In 1921 two
Italian- born anarchists, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti,
were convicted of murder on the basis of shaky evidence.
Intellectuals protested, but in 1927 the two men were electrocuted.
Congress enacted immigration limits in 1921 and tightened them
further in 1924 and 1929. These restrictions favored immigrants
from Anglo-Saxon and Nordic countries. The 1920s were an
extraordinary and confusing time, when hedonism coexisted with
puritanical conservatism. It was the age of Prohibition: In 1920 a
constitutional amendment outlawed the sale of alcoholic beverages.
Yet drinkers cheerfully evaded the law in thousands of
"speakeasies" (illegal bars), and gangsters made illicit fortunes
in liquor. It was also the Roaring Twenties, the age of jazz and
spectacular silent movies and such fads as flagpole-sitting and
goldfish-swallowing. The Ku Klux Klan, a racist organization born
in the South after the Civil War, attracted new followers and
terrorized blacks, Catholics, Jews, and immigrants. At the same
time, a Catholic, New York Governor Alfred E. Smith, was a
Democratic candidate for president. For big business, the 1920s
were golden years. The United States was now a consumer society,
with booming markets for radios, home appliances, synthetic
textiles, and plastics. One of the most admired men of the decade
was Henry Ford, who had introduced the assembly line into
automobile factories. Ford could pay high wages and still earn
enormous profits by mass-producing the Model T, a car that millions
of buyers could afford. For a moment, it seemed that Americans had
the Midas touch. But the superficial prosperity masked deep
problems. With profits soaring and interest rates low, plenty of
money was available for investment. Much of it, however, went into
reckless speculation in the stock market. Frantic bidding pushed
prices far above stock shares' real value. Investors bought stocks
"on margin," borrowing up to 90 percent of the purchase price. The
bubble burst in 1929. The stock market crashed, triggering a
worldwide depression.
THE GREAT DEPRESSION By 1932 thousands of American banks and over
100,000 businesses had failed. Industrial production was cut in
half, wages had decreased 60 percent, and one out of every four
workers was unemployed. That year Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected
president on the platform of "a New Deal for the American people."
Roosevelt's jaunty self-confidence galvanized the nation. "The only
thing we have to fear is fear itself," he said at his inauguration.
He followed up these words with decisive action. Within three
months -- the historic "Hundred Days" -- Roosevelt had rushed
through Congress a great number of laws to help the economy
recover. Such new agencies as the Civilian Conservation Corps and
the Works Progress Administration created millions of jobs by
undertaking the construction of roads, bridges, airports, parks,
and public buildings. Later the Social Security Act set up
contributory old- age and survivors' pensions. Roosevelt's New Deal
programs did not end the Depression. Although the economy improved,
full recovery had to await the defense buildup preceding America's
entry into World War II.
WORLD WAR II Again neutrality was the initial American response to
the outbreak of war in Europe in 1939. But the bombing of Pearl
Harbor naval base in Hawaii by the Japanese in December 1941
brought the United States into the war, first against Japan and
then against its allies, Germany and Italy. American, British, and
Soviet war planners agreed to concentrate on defeating Germany
first. British and American forces landed in North Africa in
November 1942, proceeded to Sicily and the Italian mainland in
1943, and liberated Rome on June 4, 1944. Two days later -- D-Day
-- Allied forces landed in Normandy. Paris was liberated on August
24, and by September American units had crossed the German border.
The Germans finally surrendered on May 5, 1945. The war against
Japan came to a swift end in August of 1945, when President Harry
Truman ordered the use of atomic bombs against the cities of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Nearly 200,000 civilians were killed.
Although the matter can still provoke heated discussion, the
argument in favor of dropping the bombs was that casualties on both
sides would have been greater if the Allies had been forced to
invade Japan.
THE COLD WAR A new international congress, the United Nations, came
into being after the war, and this time the United States joined.
Soon tensions developed between the United States and its wartime
ally the Soviet Union. Although Soviet leader Joseph Stalin had
promised to support free elections in all the liberated nations of
Europe, Soviet forces imposed Communist dictatorships in eastern
Europe. Germany became a divided country, with a western zone under
joint British, French, and American occupation and an eastern zone
under Soviet occupation. In the spring of 1948 the Soviets sealed
off West Berlin in an attempt to starve the isolated city into
submission. The western powers responded with a massive airlift of
food and fuel until the Soviets lifted the blockade in May 1949. A
month earlier the United States had allied with Belgium, Canada,
Denmark, France, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands,
Norway, Portugal, and the United Kingdom to form the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO). On June 25, 1950, armed with Soviet
weapons and acting with Stalin's approval, North Korea's army
invaded South Korea. Truman immediately secured a commitment from
the United Nations to defend South Korea. The war lasted three
years, and the final settlement left Korea divided. Soviet control
of eastern Europe, the Korean War, and the Soviet development of
atomic and hydrogen bombs instilled fear in Americans. Some
believed that the nation's new vulnerability was the work of
traitors from within. Republican Senator Joseph McCarthy asserted
in the early 1950s that the State Department and the U.S. Army were
riddled with Communists. McCarthy was eventually discredited. In
the meantime, however, careers had been destroyed, and the American
people had all but lost sight of a cardinal American virtue:
toleration of political dissent. From 1945 until 1970 the United
States enjoyed a long period of economic growth, interrupted only
by mild and brief recessions. For the first time a majority of
Americans enjoyed a comfortable standard of living. In 1960, 55
percent of all households owned washing machines, 77 percent owned
cars, 90 percent had television sets, and nearly all had
refrigerators. At the same time, the nation was moving slowly to
establish racial justice. In 1960 John F. Kennedy was elected
president. Young, energetic, and handsome, he promised to "get the
country moving again" after the eight- year presidency of Dwight D.
Eisenhower, the aging World War II general. In October 1962 Kennedy
was faced with what turned out to be the most drastic crisis of the
Cold War. The Soviet Union had been caught installing nuclear
missiles in Cuba, close enough to reach American cities in a matter
of minutes. Kennedy imposed a naval blockade on the island. Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushschev ultimately agreed to remove the
missiles, in return for an American promise not to invade Cuba. In
April 1961 the Soviets capped a series of triumphs in space by
sending the first man into orbit around the Earth. President
Kennedy responded with a promise that Americans would walk on the
moon before the decade was over. This promise was fulfilled in July
of 1969, when astronaut Neil Armstrong stepped out of the Apollo 11
spacecraft and onto the moon's surface. Kennedy did not live to see
this culmination. He had been assassinated in 1963. He was not a
universally popular president, but his death was a terrible shock
to the American people. His successor, Lyndon B. Johnson, managed
to push through Congress a number of new laws establishing social
programs. Johnson's "War on Poverty" included preschool education
for poor children, vocational training for dropouts from school,
and community service for slum youths. During his six years in
office, Johnson became preoccupied with the Vietnam War. By 1968,
500,000 American troops were fighting in that small country,
previously little known to most of them. Although politicians
tended to view the war as part of a necessary effort to check
communism on all fronts, a growing number of Americans saw no vital
American interest in what happened to Vietnam. Demonstrations
protesting American involvement broke out on college campuses, and
there were violent clashes between students and police. Antiwar
sentiment spilled over into a wide range of protests against
injustice and discrimination. Stung by his increasing unpopularity,
Johnson decided not to run for a second full term. Richard Nixon
was elected president in 1968. He pursued a policy of
Vietnamization, gradually replacing American soldiers with
Vietnamese. In 1973 he signed a peace treaty with North Vietnam and
brought American soldiers home. Nixon achieved two other diplomatic
breakthroughs: re-establishing U.S. relations with the People's
Republic of China and negotiating the first Strategic Arms
Limitation Treaty with the Soviet Union. In 1972 he easily won
re-election. During that presidential campaign, however, five men
had been arrested for breaking into Democratic Party headquarters
at the Watergate office building in Washington, D.C. Journalists
investigating the incident discovered that the burglars had been
employed by Nixon's re-election committee. The White House made
matters worse by trying to conceal its connection with the
break-in. Eventually, tape recordings made by the president himself
revealed that he had been involved in the cover-up. By the summer
of 1974, it was clear that Congress was about to impeach and
convict him. On August 9, Richard Nixon became the only U.S.
president to resign from office.
DECADES OF CHANGE After World War II the presidency had alternated
between Democrats and Republicans, but, for the most part,
Democrats had held majorities in the Congress -- in both the House
of Representatives and the Senate. A string of 26 consecutive years
of Democratic control was broken in 1980, when the Republicans
gained a majority in the Senate; at the same time, Republican
Ronald Reagan was elected president. This change marked the onset
of a volatility that has characterized American voting patterns
ever since. Whatever their attitudes toward Reagan's policies, most
Americans credited him with a capacity for instilling pride in
their country and a sense of optimism about the future. If there
was a central theme to his domestic policies, it was that the
federal government had become too big and federal taxes too high.
Despite a growing federal budget deficit, in 1983 the U.S. economy
entered into one of the longest periods of sustained growth since
World War II. The Reagan administration suffered a defeat in the
1986 elections, however, when Democrats regained control of the
Senate. The most serious issue of the day was the revelation that
the United States had secretly sold arms to Iran in an attempt to
win freedom for American hostages held in Lebanon and to finance
antigovernment forces in Nicaragua at a time when Congress had
prohibited such aid. Despite these revelations, Reagan continued to
enjoy strong popularity throughout his second term in office. His
successor in 1988, Republican George Bush, benefited from Reagan's
popularity and continued many of his policies. When Iraq invaded
oil-rich Kuwait in 1990, Bush put together a multinational
coalition that liberated Kuwait early in 1991. By 1992, however,
the American electorate had become restless again. Voters elected
Bill Clinton, a Democrat, president, only to turn around two years
later and give Republicans their first majority in both the House
and Senate in 40 years. Meanwhile, several perennial debates had
broken out anew -- between advocates of a strong federal government
and believers in decentralization of power, between advocates of
prayer in public schools and defenders of separation of church and
state, between those who emphasize swift and sure punishment of
criminals and those who seek to address the underlying causes of
crime. Complaints about the influence of money on political
campaigns inspired a movement to limit the number of terms elected
officials could serve. This and other discontents with the system
led to the formation of the strongest Third-Party movement in
generations, led by Texas businessman H. Ross Perot. Although the
economy was strong in the mid-1990s, two phenomena were troubling
many Americans. Corporations were resorting more and more to a
process known as downsizing: trimming the work force to cut costs
despite the hardships this inflicted on workers. And in many
industries the gap between the annual compensations of corporate
executives and common laborers had become enormous. Even the
majority of Americans who enjoy material comfort worry about a
perceived decline in the quality of life, in the strength of the
family, in neighborliness and civility. Americans probably remain
the most optimistic people in the world, but with the century
drawing to a close, opinion polls showed that trait in shorter
supply than usual.
Geography and regional characteristics. The USA stretches from the
heavily industrialized, metropolitan Atlantic coast, across the
rich farms of the Great Plains, over the Appalachian and the Rocky
Mountains to the densely populated West coast. Alaska and the
island state of Hawaii are detached from the main mid-continental
group of 48 states. America is the land of physical contrasts,
including the weather. Most of the USA is the temperate zone with
four distinct seasons, while the northern states and Alaska have
extremely cold winters, and the southern parts of Florida, Texas,
California have warm weather year round. The area of the United
States is 9 629 091 square km. The United States is the land of
bountiful rivers and lakes. Minnesota is the land of 10.000 lakes.
The Mississippi River runs nearly 6 thousand km from Canada to the
Gulf of Mexico. The St. Lawrence Seaway connects the Great lakes
with the Atlantic Ocean. Underground, a wealth of minerals provides
a solid base for American industry. History has glamorized the gold
rushes of California and Alaska and the silver finds in Nevada.
Location: North America, bordering both the North Atlantic Ocean
and the North Pacific Ocean, between Canada and Mexico Map
references: North America Area: total area: 9,372,610 sq km land
area: 9,166,600 sq km comparative area: about half the size of
Russia; about three-tenths the size of Africa; about one-half the
size of South America (or slightly larger than Brazil); slightly
smaller than China; about two and one-half times the size of
Western Europe note: includes only the 50 states and District of
Columbia Land boundaries: total 12,248 km, Canada 8,893 km
(including 2,477 km with Alaska), Cuba 29 km (US Naval Base at
Guantanamo Bay), Mexico 3,326 km Coastline: 19,924 km Climate:
mostly temperate, but tropical in Hawaii and Florida and arctic in
Alaska, semiarid in the great plains west of the Mississippi River
and arid in the Great Basin of the southwest; low winter
temperatures in the northwest are ameliorated occasionally in
January and February by warm chinook winds from the eastern slopes
of the Rocky Mountains Terrain: vast central plain, mountains in
west, hills and low mountains in east; rugged mountains and broad
river valleys in Alaska; rugged, volcanic topography in Hawaii
Natural resources: coal, copper, lead, molybdenum, phosphates,
uranium, bauxite, gold, iron, mercury, nickel, potash, silver,
tungsten, zinc, petroleum, natural gas, timber Land use: arable
land: 20%, permanent crops: 0%, meadows and pastures: 26%, forest
and woodland: 29%, other: 25%, irrigated land: 181,020 sq km (1989
est.) Environment: current issues: air pollution resulting in acid
rain in both the US and Canada; the US is the largest single
emitter of carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels; water
pollution from runoff of pesticides and fertilizers; very limited
natural fresh water resources in much of the western part of the
country require careful management; desertification.
natural
hazards: tsunamis, volcanoes, and earthquake activity around
Pacific Basin; hurricanes along the Atlantic coast; tornadoes in
the midwest; mudslides in California; forest fires in the west;
flooding; permafrost in northern Alaska is a major impediment to
development international agreements: party to - Air Pollution, Air
Pollution-Nitrogen Oxides, Antarctic Treaty, Climate Change,
Endangered Species, Environmental Modification, Marine Dumping,
Marine Life Conservation, Nuclear Test Ban, Ozone Layer Protection,
Ship Pollution, Tropical Timber 83, Wetlands, Whaling; signed, but
not ratified - Air Pollution-Volatile Organic Compounds,
Antarctic-Environmental Protocol, Biodiversity, Desertification,
Hazardous Wastes, Tropical Timber 94 Note: world's fourth-largest
country (after Russia, Canada, and China)
Traditionally the USA is divided into several regions:
2. New England, made up of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont,
Massachusetts,
Connecticut, and Rhode Island.
3. The Middle Atlantic, comprising New York, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania,
Delaware, and Maryland.
4. The South, which runs from Virginia south to Florida and west as
far as central Texas. This region also includes West Virginia,
Kentucky,
Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama,
Mississippi, Arkansas, Louisiana, and parts of Missouri and
Oklahoma.
5. The Midwest, a broad collection of states sweeping westward from
Ohio to Nebraska and including Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin,
Illinois,
Minnesota, Iowa, parts of Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota,
Kansas, and eastern Colorado.
6. The Southwest, made up of western Texas, portions of Oklahoma,
New
Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, and the southern interior part of
California.
7. The West, comprising Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, Utah,
California,
Nevada, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, Alaska, and Hawaii. Note that
there is nothing official about these regions; many other lineups
are possible. These groupings are offered simply as a way to begin
the otherwise daunting task of getting acquainted with the United
States.
REGIONAL VARIETY How much sense does it make to talk about American
regions when practically all Americans can watch the same
television shows and go to the same fast- food restaurants for
dinner? One way to answer the question is by giving examples of
lingering regional differences. Consider the food Americans eat.
Most of it is standard wherever you go. A person can buy packages
of frozen peas bearing the same label in Idaho, Missouri, and
Virginia. Cereals, candy bars, and many other items also come in
identical packages from Alaska to Florida. Generally, the quality
of fresh fruits and vegetables does not vary much from one state to
the next. On the other hand, it would be unusual to be served hush
puppies (a kind of fried dough) or grits (boiled and ground corn
prepared in a variety of ways) in Massachusetts or Illinois, but
normal to get them in Georgia. Other regions have similar favorites
that are hard to find elsewhere. While American English is
generally standard, American speech often differs according to what
part of the country you are in. Southerners tend to speak slowly,
in what is referred to as a "Southern drawl." Midwesterners use
"flat" a's (as in "bad" or "cat"), and the New York City patois
features a number of Yiddish words ("schlepp," "nosh," "nebbish")
contributed by the city's large Jewish population. Regional
differences also make themselves felt in less tangible ways, such
as attitudes and outlooks. An example is the attention paid to
foreign events in newspapers. In the East, where people look out
across the Atlantic Ocean, papers tend to show greatest concern
with what is happening in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and
western Asia. On the West Coast, news editors give more attention
to events in East Asia and Australia. To understand regional
differences more fully, let's take a closer look at the regions
themselves.
NEW ENGLAND The smallest region, New England has not been blessed
with large expanses of rich farmland or a mild climate. Yet it
played a dominant role in American development. From the 17th
century until well into the 19th, New England was the country's
cultural and economic center. The earliest European settlers of New
England were English Protestants of firm and settled doctrine. Many
of them came in search of religious liberty. They gave the region
its distinctive political format -- the town meeting (an outgrowth
of meetings held by church elders) in which citizens gathered to
discuss issues of the day. Only men of property could vote.
Nonetheless, town meetings afforded New Englanders an unusually
high level of participation in government. Such meetings still
function in many New England communities today. New Englanders
found it difficult to farm the land in large lots, as was common in
the South. By 1750, many settlers had turned to other pursuits. The
mainstays of the region became shipbuilding, fishing, and trade. In
their business dealings, New Englanders gained a reputation for
hard work, shrewdness, thrift, and ingenuity. These traits came in
handy as the Industrial Revolution reached America in the first
half of the 19th century. In Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode
Island, new factories sprang up to manufacture such goods as
clothing, rifles, and clocks. Most of the money to run these
businesses came from Boston, which was the financial heart of the
nation. New England also supported a vibrant cultural life. The
critic Van Wyck Brooks called the creation of a distinctive
American literature in the first half of the 19th century "the
flowering of New England." Education is another of the region's
strongest legacies. Its cluster of top-ranking universities and
colleges -- including Harvard, Yale, Brown, Dartmouth, Wellesley,
Smith, Mt. Holyoke, Williams, Amherst, and Wesleyan -- is unequaled
by any other region. As some of the original New England settlers
migrated westward, immigrants from Canada, Ireland, Italy, and
eastern Europe moved into the region. Despite a changing
population, much of the original spirit of New England remains. It
can be seen in the simple, woodframe houses and white church
steeples that are features of many small towns, and in the
traditional lighthouses that dot the Atlantic coast. In the 20th
century, most of New England's traditional industries have
relocated to states or foreign countries where goods can be made
more cheaply. In more than a few factory towns, skilled workers
have been left without jobs. The gap has been partly filled by the
microelectronics and computer industries.
MIDDLE ATLANTIC If New England provided the brains and dollars for
19th-century American expansion, the Middle Atlantic states
provided the muscle. The region's largest states, New York and
Pennsylvania, became centers of heavy industry (iron, glass, and
steel). The Middle Atlantic region was settled by a wider range of
people than New England. Dutch immigrants moved into the lower
Hudson River Valley in what is now New York State. Swedes went to
Delaware. English Catholics founded Maryland, and an English
Protestant sect, the Friends (Quakers), settled Pennsylvania. In
time, all these settlements fell under English control, but the
region continued to be a magnet for people of diverse
nationalities. Early settlers were mostly farmers and traders, and
the region served as a bridge between North and South.
Philadelphia, in Pennsylvania, midway between the northern and
southern colonies, was home to the Continental Congress, the
convention of delegates from the original colonies that organized
the American Revolution. The same city was the birthplace of the
Declaration of Independence in 1776 and the U.S. Constitution in
1787. As heavy industry spread throughout the region, rivers such
as the Hudson and Delaware were transformed into vital shipping
lanes. Cities on waterways -- New York on the Hudson, Philadelphia
on the Delaware, Baltimore on Chesapeake Bay -- grew dramatically.
New York is still the nation's largest city, its financial hub, and
its cultural center. Like New England, the Middle Atlantic region
has seen much of its heavy industry relocate elsewhere. Other
industries, such as drug manufacturing and communications, have
taken up the slack.
THE SOUTH The South is perhaps the most distinctive and colorful
American region. The American Civil War (1861-65) devastated the
South socially and economically. Nevertheless, it retained its
unmistakable identity. Like New England, the South was first
settled by English Protestants. But whereas New Englanders tended
to stress their differences from the old country, Southerners
tended to emulate the English. Even so, Southerners were prominent
among the leaders of the American Revolution, and four of America's
first five presidents were Virginians. After 1800, however, the
interests of the manufacturing North and the agrarian South began
to diverge. Especially in coastal areas, southern settlers grew
wealthy by raising and selling cotton and tobacco. The most
economical way to raise these crops was on large farms, called
plantations, which required the work of many laborers. To supply
this need, plantation owners relied on slaves brought from Africa,
and slavery spread throughout the South. Slavery was the most
contentious issue dividing North and South. To northerners it was
immoral; to southerners it was integral to their way of life. In
1860, 11 southern states left the Union intending to form a
separate nation, the Confederate States of America. This rupture
led to the Civil War, the Confederacy's defeat, and the end of
slavery. (For more on the Civil War, see chapter 3.) The scars left
by the war took decades to heal. The abolition of slavery failed to
provide African Americans with political or economic equality:
Southern towns and cities legalized and refined the practice of
racial segregation. It took a long, concerted effort by African
Americans and their supporters to end segregation. In the meantime,
however, the South could point with pride to a 20th-century
regional outpouring of literature by, among others, William
Faulkner, Thomas Wolfe, Robert Penn Warren, Katherine Anne Porter,
Tennessee Williams, Eudora Welty, and Flannery O'Connor. As
southerners, black and white, shook off the effects of slavery and
racial division, a new regional pride expressed itself under the
banner of "the New South" and in such events as the annual Spoleto
Music Festival in Charleston, South Carolina, and the 1996 summer
Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia. Today the South has evolved into
a manufacturing region, and high- rise buildings crowd the skylines
of such cities as Atlanta and Little Rock, Arkansas. Owing to its
mild weather, the South has become a mecca for retirees from other
U.S. regions and from Canada.
THE MIDWEST The Midwest is a cultural crossroads. Starting in the
early 1800s easterners moved there in search of better farmland,
and soon Europeans bypassed the East Coast to migrate directly to
the interior: Germans to eastern Missouri, Swedes and Norwegians to
Wisconsin and Minnesota. The region's fertile soil made it possible
for farmers to produce abundant harvests of cereal crops such as
wheat, oats, and corn. The region was soon known as the nation's
"breadbasket." Most of the Midwest is flat. The Mississippi River
has acted as a regional lifeline, moving settlers to new homes and
foodstuffs to market. The river inspired two classic American
books, both written by a native Missourian, Samuel Clemens, who
took the pseudonym Mark Twain: Life on the Mississippi and
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Midwesterners are praised as being
open, friendly, and straightforward. Their politics tend to be
cautious, but the caution is sometimes peppered with protest. The
Midwest gave birth to one of America's two major political parties,
the Republican Party, which was formed in the 1850s to oppose the
spread of slavery into new states. At the turn of the century, the
region also spawned the Progressive Movement, which largely
consisted of farmers and merchants intent on making government less
corrupt and more receptive to the will of the people. Perhaps
because of their geographic location, many midwesterners have been
strong adherents of isolationism, the belief that Americans should
not concern themselves with foreign wars and problems. The region's
hub is Chicago, Illinois, the nation's third largest city. This
major Great Lakes port is a connecting point for rail lines and air
traffic to far-flung parts of the nation and the world. At its
heart stands the Sears Tower, at 447 meters, the world's tallest
building.
THE SOUTHWEST The Southwest differs from the adjoining Midwest in
weather (drier), population (less dense), and ethnicity (strong
Spanish-American and Native- American components). Outside the
cities, the region is a land of open spaces, much of which is
desert. The magnificent Grand Canyon is located in this region, as
is Monument Valley, the starkly beautiful backdrop for many western
movies. Monument Valley is within the Navajo Reservation, home of
the most populous American Indian tribe. To the south and east lie
dozens of other Indian reservations, including those of the Hopi,
Zuni, and Apache tribes. Parts of the Southwest once belonged to
Mexico. The United States obtained this land following the
Mexican-American War of 1846-48. Its Mexican heritage continues to
exert a strong influence on the region, which is a convenient place
to settle for immigrants (legal or illegal) from farther south. The
regional population is growing rapidly, with Arizona in particular
rivaling the southern states as a destination for retired Americans
in search of a warm climate. Population growth in the hot, arid
Southwest has depended on two human artifacts: the dam and the air
conditioner. Dams on the Colorado and other rivers and aqueducts
such as those of the Central Arizona Project have brought water to
once-small towns such as Las Vegas, Nevada; Phoenix, Arizona; and
Albuquerque, New Mexico, allowing them to become metropolises. Las
Vegas is renowned as one of the world's centers for gambling, while
Santa Fe, New Mexico, is famous as a center for the arts,
especially painting, sculpture, and opera. Another system of dams
and irrigation projects waters the Central Valley of California,
which is noted for producing large harvests of fruits and
vegetables.
THE WEST Americans have long regarded the West as the last
frontier. Yet California has a history of European settlement older
than that of most midwestern states. Spanish priests founded
missions along the California coast a few years before the outbreak
of the American Revolution. In the 19th century, California and
Oregon entered the Union ahead of many states to the east. The West
is a region of scenic beauty on a grand scale. All of its 11 states
are partly mountainous, and the ranges are the sources of startling
contrasts. To the west of the peaks, winds from the Pacific Ocean
carry enough moisture to keep the land well-watered. To the east,
however, the land is very dry. Parts of western Washington State,
for example, receive 20 times the amount of rain that falls on the
eastern side of the state's Cascade Range. In much of the West the
population is sparse, and the federal government owns and manages
millions of hectares of undeveloped land. Americans use these areas
for recreational and commercial activities, such as fishing,
camping, hiking, boating, grazing, lumbering, and mining. In recent
years some local residents who earn their livelihoods on federal
land have come into conflict with the land's managers, who are
required to keep land use within environmentally acceptable limits.
Alaska, the northernmost state in the Union, is a vast land of few,
but hardy, people and great stretches of wilderness, protected in
national parks and wildlife refuges. Hawaii is the only state in
the union in which Asian Americans outnumber residents of European
stock. Beginning in the 1980s large numbers of Asians have also
settled in California, mainly around Los Angeles. Los Angeles --
and Southern California as a whole -- bears the stamp of its large
Mexican-American population. Now the second largest city in the
nation, Los Angeles is best known as the home of the Hollywood film
industry. Fueled by the growth of Los Angeles and the "Silicon
Valley" area near San Jose, California has become the most populous
of all the states. Western cities are known for their tolerance.
Perhaps because so many westerners have moved there from other
regions to make a new start, as a rule interpersonal relations are
marked by a live-and-let-live attitude. The western economy is
varied. California, for example, is both an agricultural state and
a high-technology manufacturing state.
THE FRONTIER SPIRIT One final American region deserves mention. It
is not a fixed place but a moving zone, as well as a state of mind:
the border between settlements and wilderness known as the
frontier. Writing in the 1890s, historian Frederick Jackson Turner
claimed that the availability of vacant land throughout much of the
nation's history has shaped American attitudes and institutions.
"This perennial rebirth," he wrote, "this expansion westward with
its new opportunities, its continuous touch with the simplicity of
primitive society, furnish the forces dominating American
character." Numerous present-day American values and attitudes can
be traced to the frontier past: self-reliance, resourcefulness,
comradeship, a strong sense of equality. After the Civil War a
large number of black Americans moved west in search of equal
opportunities, and many of them gained some fame and fortune as
cowboys, miners, and prairie settlers. In 1869 the western
territory of Wyoming became the first place that allowed women to
vote and to hold elected office. Because the resources of the West
seemed limitless, people developed wasteful attitudes and
practices. The great herds of buffalo (American bison) were
slaughtered until only fragments remained, and many other species
were driven to the brink of extinction. Rivers were dammed and
their natural communities disrupted. Forests were destroyed by
excess logging, and landscapes were scarred by careless mining. A
counterweight to the abuse of natural resources took form in the
American conservation movement, which owes much of its success to
Americans' reluctance to see frontier conditions disappear entirely
from the landscape. Conservationists were instrumental in
establishing the first national park, Yellowstone, in 1872, and the
first national forests in the 1890s. More recently, the Endangered
Species Act has helped stem the tide of extinctions. Environmental
programs can be controversial; for example, some critics believe
that the Endangered Species Act hampers economic progress. But,
overall, the movement to preserve America's natural endowment
continues to gain strength. Its replication replication in many
other countries around the world is a tribute to the lasting
influence of the American frontier.
A responsive government. Separation of powers and the democratic
process. The early American way of life encouraged democracy. The
colonists were inhabiting a land of forest and wilderness. They had
to work together to build shelter, provide food, and clear the land
for farms and dwellings. This need for cooperation strengthened the
belief that, in the New World, people should be on an equal
footing, with nobody having special privileges. The urge for
equality affected the original 13 colonies' relations with the
mother country, England. The Declaration of Independence in 1776
proclaimed that all men are created equal, that all have the right
to "Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness." The Declaration
of Independence, and the Constitution after it, combined America's
colonial experience with the political thought of such philosophers
as England's John Locke to produce the concept of a democratic
republic. The government would draw its power from the people
themselves and exercise it through their elected representatives.
During the Revolutionary War, the colonies had formed a national
congress to present England with a united front. Under an agreement
known as the Articles of Confederation, a postwar congress was
allowed to handle only problems that were beyond the capabilities
of individual states.
THE CONSTITUTION The Articles of Confederation failed as a
governing document for the United States because the states did not
cooperate as expected. When it came time to pay wages to the
national army or the war debt to France, some states refused to
contribute. To cure this weakness, the congress asked each state to
send a delegate to a convention. The so-called Constitutional
Convention met in Philadelphia in May of 1787, with George
Washington presiding. The delegates struck a balance between those
who wanted a strong central government and those who did not. The
resulting master plan, or Constitution, set up a system in which
some powers were given to the national, or federal, government,
while others were reserved for the states. The Constitution divided
the national government into three parts, or branches: the
legislative (the Congress, which consists of a House of
Representatives and a Senate), the executive (headed by the
president), and the judicial (the federal courts). Called
"separation of powers," this division gives each branch certain
duties and substantial independence from the others. It also gives
each branch some authority over the others through a system of
"checks and balances." Here are a few examples of how checks and
balances work in practice.
8. If Congress passes a proposed law, or "bill," that the president
considers unwise, he can veto it. That means that the bill is dead
unless two-thirds of the members of both the House and the Senate
vote to enact it despite the president's veto.
9. If Congress passes, and the president signs, a law that is
challenged in the federal courts as contrary to the Constitution,
the courts can nullify that law. (The federal courts cannot issue
advisory or theoretical opinions, however; their jurisdiction is
limited to actual disputes.) 10. The president has the power to
make treaties with other nations and to make appointments to
federal positions, including judgeships. The
Senate, however, must approve all treaties and confirm the
appointments before they can go into effect. Recently some
observers have discerned what they see as a weakness in the
tripartite system of government: a tendency toward too much
checking and balancing that results in governmental stasis, or
"gridlock."
BILL OF RIGHTS The Constitution written in Philadelphia in 1787
could not go into effect until it was ratified by a majority of
citizens in at least 9 of the then 13 U.S. states. During this
ratification process, misgivings arose. Many citizens felt uneasy
because the document failed to explicitly guarantee the rights of
individuals. The desired language was added in 10 amendments to the
Constitution, collectively known as the Bill of Rights. The Bill of
Rights guarantees Americans freedom of speech, of religion, and of
the press. They have the right to assemble in public places, to
protest government actions, and to demand change. There is a right
to own firearms. Because of the Bill of Rights, neither police
officers nor soldiers can stop and search a person without good
reason. Nor can they search a person's home without permission from
a court to do so. The Bill of Rights guarantees a speedy trial to
anyone accused of a crime. The trial must be by jury if requested,
and the accused person must be allowed representation by a lawyer
and to call witnesses to speak for him or her. Cruel and unusual
punishment is forbidden. With the addition of the Bill of Rights,
the Constitution was ratified by all 13 states and went into effect
in 1789. Since then 17 other amendments have been added to the
Constitution. Perhaps the most important of these are the
Thirteenth and Fourteenth, which outlaw slavery and guarantee all
citizens equal protection of the laws, and the Nineteenth, which
gives women the right to vote. The Constitution can be amended in
either of two ways. Congress can propose an amendment, provided
that two-thirds of the members of both the House and the Senate
vote in favor of it. Or the legislatures of two-thirds of the
states can call a convention to propose amendments. (This second
method has never been used.) In either case a proposed amendment
does not go into effect until ratified by three-fourths of the
states.
LEGISLATIVE BRANCH The legislative branch -- the Congress -- is
made up of elected representatives from each of the 50 states. It
is the only branch of U.S. government that can make federal laws,
levy federal taxes, declare war, and put foreign treaties into
effect. Members of the House of Representatives are elected to
two-year terms. Each member represents a district in his or her
home state. The number of districts is determined by a census,
which is conducted every 10 years. The most populous states are
allowed more representatives than the smaller ones, some of which
have only one. In all, there are 435 representatives in the House.
Senators are elected to six-year terms. Each state has two
senators, regardless of population. Senators' terms are staggered,
so that one-third of the Senate stands for election every two
years. There are 100 senators. To become a law, a bill must pass
both the House and the Senate. After the bill is introduced in
either body, it is studied by one or more committees, amended,
voted out of committee, and discussed in the chamber of the House
or Senate. If passed by one body, it goes to the other for
consideration. When a bill passes the House and the Senate in
different forms, members of both bodies meet in a "conference
committee" to iron out the differences. Groups that try to persuade
members of Congress to vote for or against a bill are called
"lobbies." They may try to exert their influence at almost any
stage of the legislative process. Once both bodies have passed the
same version of a bill, it goes to the president for approval.
EXECUTIVE BRANCH The chief executive of the United States is the
president, who together with the vice president is elected to a
four-year term. As a result of a constitutional amendment that went
into effect in 1951, a president may be elected to only two terms.
Other than succeeding a president who dies or is disabled, the vice
president's only official duty is presiding over the Senate. The
vice president may vote in the Senate only to break a tie. The
president's powers are formidable but not unlimited. As the chief
formulator of national policy, the president proposes legislation
to Congress. As mentioned previously, the president may veto any
bill passed by Congress. The president is commander-in-chief of the
armed forces. The president has the authority to appoint federal
judges as vacancies occur, including justices of the Supreme Court.
As head of his political party, with ready access to the news
media, the president can easily influence public opinion. Within
the executive branch, the president has broad powers to issue
regulations and directives carrying out the work of the federal
government's departments and agencies. The president appoints the
heads and senior officials of those departments and agencies. Heads
of the major departments, called "secretaries," are part of the
president's cabinet. The majority of federal workers, however, are
selected on the basis of merit, not politics.
JUDICIAL BRANCH The judicial branch is headed by the U.S. Supreme
Court, which is the only court specifically created by the
Constitution. In addition, Congress has established 13 federal
courts of appeals and, below them, about 95 federal district
courts. The Supreme Court meets in Washington, D.C., and the other
federal courts are located in cities throughout the United States.
Federal judges are appointed for life or until they retire
voluntarily; they can be removed from office only via a laborious
process of impeachment and trial in the Congress. The federal
courts hear cases arising out of the Constitution and federal laws
and treaties, maritime cases, cases involving foreign citizens or
governments, and cases in which the federal government is itself a
party. The Supreme Court consists of a chief justice and eight
associate justices. With minor exceptions, cases come to the
Supreme Court on appeal from lower federal or state courts. Most of
these cases involve disputes over the interpretation and
constitutionality of actions taken by the executive branch and of
laws passed by Congress or the states (like federal laws, state
laws must be consistent with the U.S. Constitution).
THE COURT OF LAST RESORT Although the three branches are said to be
equal, often the Supreme Court has the last word on an issue. The
courts can rule a law unconstitutional, which makes it void. Most
such rulings are appealed to the Supreme Court, which is thus the
final arbiter of what the Constitution means. Newspapers commonly
print excerpts from the justices' opinions in important cases, and
the Court's decisions are often the subject of public debate. This
is as it should be: The decisions may settle longstanding
controversies and can have social effects far beyond the immediate
outcome. Two famous, related examples are Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
and Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954). In Plessy the
issue was whether blacks could be required to ride in separate
railroad cars from whites. The Court articulated a "separate but
equal" doctrine as its basis for upholding the practice. The case
sent a signal that the Court was interpreting the Thirteenth and
Fourteenth Amendments narrowly and that a widespread network of
laws and custom treating blacks and whites differently would not be
disturbed. One justice, John Marshall Harlan, dissented from the
decision, arguing that "the Constitution is color-blind." Almost 60
years later the Court changed its mind. In Brown the court held
that deliberately segregated public schools violated the Fourteenth
Amendment's equal protection clause. Although the Court did not
directly overrule its Plessy decision, Justice Harlan's view of the
Constitution was vindicated. The 1954 ruling applied directly only
to schools in the city of Topeka, Kansas, but the principle it
articulated reached every public school in the nation. More than
that, the case undermined segregation in all governmental endeavors
and set the nation on a new course of treating all citizens alike.
The Brown decision caused consternation among some citizens,
particularly in the South, but was eventually accepted as the law
of the land. Other controversial Supreme Court decisions have not
received the same degree of acceptance. In several cases between
1962 and 1985, for example, the Court decided that requiring
students to pray or listen to prayer in public schools violated the
Constitution's prohibition against establishing a religion. Critics
of these decisions believe that the absence of prayer in public
schools has contributed to a decline in American morals; they have
tried to find ways to restore prayer to the schools without
violating the Constitution. In Roe v. Wade (1973), the Court
guaranteed women the right to have abortions in certain
circumstances -- a decision that continues to offend those
Americans who consider abortion to be murder. Because the Roe v.
Wade decision was based on an interpretation of the Constitution,
opponents have been trying to amend the Constitution to overturn
it.
POLITICAL PARTIES AND ELECTIONS Americans regularly exercise their
democratic rights by voting in elections and by participating in
political parties and election campaigns. Today, there are two
major political parties in the United States, the Democratic and
the Republican. The Democratic Party evolved from the party of
Thomas Jefferson, formed before 1800. The Republican Party was
established in the 1850s by Abraham Lincoln and others who opposed
the expansion of slavery into new states then being admitted to the
Union. The Democratic Party is considered to be the more liberal
party, and the Republican, the more conservative. Democrats
generally believe that government has an obligation to provide
social and economic programs for those who need them. Republicans
are not necessarily opposed to such programs but believe they are
too costly to taxpayers. Republicans put more emphasis on
encouraging private enterprise in the belief that a strong private
sector makes citizens less dependent on government. Both major
parties have supporters among a wide variety of Americans and
embrace a wide range of political views. Members, and even elected
officials, of one party do not necessarily agree with each other on
every issue. Americans do not have to join a political party to
vote or to be a candidate for public office, but running for office
without the money and campaign workers a party can provide is
difficult. Minor political parties -- generally referred to as
"third parties" -- occasionally form in the United States, but
their candidates are rarely elected to office. Minor parties often
serve, however, to call attention to an issue that is of concern to
voters, but has been neglected in the political dialogue. When this
happens, one or both of the major parties may address the matter,
and the third party disappears. At the national level, elections
are held every two years, in even- numbered years, on the first
Tuesday following the first Monday in November. State and local
elections often coincide with national elections, but they also are
held in other years and can take place at other times of year.
Americans are free to determine how much or how little they become
involved in the political process. Many citizens actively
participate by working as volunteers for a candidate, by promoting
a particular cause, or by running for office themselves. Others
restrict their participation to voting on election day, quietly
letting their democratic system work, confident that their freedoms
are protected.
The USA: its history, geography and political system
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