- published: 18 Oct 2013
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The New Deal was a series of domestic programs enacted in the United States between 1933 and 1938, and a few that came later. They included both laws passed by Congress as well as presidential executive orders during the first term (1933–1937) of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The programs were in response to the Great Depression, and focused on what historians refer to as the "3 Rs," Relief, Recovery, and Reform: relief for the unemployed and poor, recovery of the economy to normal levels, and reform of the financial system to prevent a repeat depression.
The New Deal produced a political realignment, making the Democratic Party the majority (as well as the party that held the White House for seven out of nine Presidential terms from 1933 to 1969), with its base in liberal ideas, the South, traditional Democrats, big city machines, and the newly empowered labor unions and ethnic minorities. The Republicans were split, with conservatives opposing the entire New Deal as an enemy of business and growth, and liberals accepting some of it and promising to make it more efficient. The realignment crystallized into the New Deal Coalition that dominated most presidential elections into the 1960s, while the opposition Conservative Coalition largely controlled Congress from 1937 to 1963. By 1936 the term "liberal" typically was used for supporters of the New Deal, and "conservative" for its opponents. From 1934 to 1938, Roosevelt was assisted in his endeavours by a "pro-spender" majority in Congress (drawn from two-party, competitive, non-machine, Progressive, and Left party districts). As noted by Alexander Hicks, "Roosevelt, backed by rare, non-Southern Democrat majorities—270 non-Southern Democrat representatives and 71 non-Southern Democrat senators—spelled Second New Deal reform." In the 1938 midterm elections, however, Roosevelt and his liberal supporters lost control of Congress to the bipartisan Conservative Coalition.
Turn On the Bright Lights is the debut studio album by the American rock band Interpol, released in August 2002. The album was recorded in November 2001 at Tarquin Studios in Connecticut, and was co-produced, mixed and engineered by Peter Katis and Gareth Jones. It was released on August 19, 2002 in the United Kingdom and August 20 in the United States, through independent record label Matador Records. Upon release, the record peaked at number 101 on the UK Albums Chart. It reached number 158 on the Billboard 200 in the United States, as well as spending 73 weeks in the Billboard Independent Albums, peaking at number five.
"PDA", "NYC", "Obstacle 1" and "Say Hello to the Angels" were the singles from Turn On the Bright Lights, and a video was shot for each with the exception of "Say Hello to the Angels".
The album was certified Gold by the RIAA on August 29, 2011 for shipments of 500,000 copies.
A remastered version of the album was released in 2012 to commemorate its tenth anniversary. It featured additional material including demo recordings of several tracks, the bonus songs previously available on international releases and a DVD of live performances and music videos.
The Great Depression was a severe worldwide economic depression that took place during the 1930s. The timing of the Great Depression varied across nations; however, in most countries it started in 1929 and lasted until the late 1930s. It was the longest, deepest, and most widespread depression of the 20th century. In the 21st century, the Great Depression is commonly used as an example of how far the world's economy can decline.
The depression originated in the United States, after a fall in stock prices that began around September 4, 1929, and became worldwide news with the stock market crash of October 29, 1929 (known as Black Tuesday). Between 1929 and 1932, worldwide GDP fell by an estimated 15%. By comparison, worldwide GDP fell by less than 1% from 2008 to 2009 during the Great Recession. Some economies started to recover by the mid-1930s. However, in many countries, the negative effects of the Great Depression lasted until the beginning of World War II.
The Great Depression had devastating effects in countries both rich and poor. Personal income, tax revenue, profits and prices dropped, while international trade plunged by more than 50%. Unemployment in the U.S. rose to 25% and in some countries rose as high as 33%.
Deal may refer to:
Roosevelt commonly refers to:
Roosevelt may also refer to:
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You can directly support Crash Course at https://www.patreon.com/crashcourse Subscribe for as little as $0 to keep up with everything we're doing. Free is nice, but if you can afford to pay a little every month, it really helps us to continue producing this content. In which John Green teaches you about the New Deal, which was president Franklin D. Roosevelt's plan to pull the united States out of the Great Depression of the 1930's. Did it work? Maybe. John will teach you about some of the most effective and some of the best known programs of the New Deal. They weren't always the same thing. John will tell you who supported the New Deal, and who opposed it. He'll also get into how the New Deal changed the relationship between the government and citizens, and will even reveal just how the ...
APUSH Test Stress? Check out our review! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXrBNizn7PI How it Happened US History FDR's plan for recovery from the Great Depression, the New Deal. Check out the prequel on the Great Depression here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wAZ-RpAO1z4
Grab a spoon and get ready to eat some tasty FDR New Deal soup as HipHughes hop scotches his way through ten alphabet soup policies, court packing, new deal criticisms and a partridge in a pear tree. Super for last minute crammers, curious life ling learners and internet crazies. Love history? Come "like" / follow HipHughes History on Facebook! Play games like "Bad Rhymes" and "Who the Hell am I"? Get you name on the scoreboard and if you're really good win swag prizes like online cred, swag and gansta bragging rights! www.facebook.com/hiphugheshistory Click below for links to tons of edu content creators sure to make you brain twice its size. Subscribe to my fellow EDU Gurus!! AMOR SCIENDI http://www.youtube.com/AmorSciendi ASAP SCIENCE http://www.youtube.com/AsapSCIENCE BOZEMAN B...
Nothing cures a Depression better than a New Deal and Bruno Mars! Learn the major programs of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal! New videos every Tuesday! Like on FaceBook: http://facebook.com/MrBettsClass Follow on Twitter: http://twitter.com/MrBettsClass Instagram: http://instagram.com/MrBettsClass "En la Brisa" Music by Dan-O at http://DanoSongs.com (Franklin, Delano, Delano) This Great Depression Has grown worse, not lessened, We want a new President, 'Cause Hoover's not listening, We're jobless, bankrupt, Living parks in the city, I ate a boot for dinner last night, Won't someone give me some pity? Got a job? (New Deal) NRA gonna get you paid, (Franklin, Delano, Delano) Need a job? (New Deal) Try the CCC or PWA, You a bank? (New Deal) Glass-Steagall says you cannot trade, You fa...
Apart from Germany the United States was the nation hit the hardest by the Great Depression. U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt initiated the New Deal which should be the basis for American economic policies until Reagan's presidency.
Historian Stephen Davies names three persistent myths about the Great Depression. Myth #1: Herbert Hoover was a laissez-faire president, and it was his lack of action that lead to an economic collapse. Davies argues that in fact, Hoover was a very interventionist president, and it was his intervening in the economy that made matters worse. Myth #2: The New Deal ended the Great Depression. Davies argues that the New Deal actually made matters worse. In other countries, the Great Depression ended much sooner and more quickly than it did in the United States. Myth #3: World War II ended the Great Depression. Davies explains that military production is not real wealth.; wars destroy wealth, they do not create wealth. In fact, examination of the historical data reveals that the U.S. economy did...
Aura Music & Arts Festival 2016: The New Deal - Full Set - Amphitheater Stage - Spirit Of The Suwannee Music Park - Live Oak, FL., 3-4-2016, featuring Dan Kurtz (bass), Joel Stouffer (drums), Jamie Shields (keyboard). Recorded by adam @ CHeeSeHeaDPRoDuCTioNS. Best viewed in 720-1080p HD. Setlist: 01) Otter Brown Jam 02) Outer Space Jam into Glide 03) Outrageous Orange Jam 04) Glide Reprise 05) Banter 06) Quattro Part 1 07) Oxford Blue Jam 08) OU Crimson Jam 09) Quattro Part 2 10) Banter 11) Mercury Switch Part 1 12) Pacific Blue Jam 13) VL Tone 14) Pakistan Green Jam into Mercury Switch Part 2 15) Banter 16) Dark One 17) Sabotage the System
Harry Kreisler welcomes Pulitzer Prize winning historian David M. Kennedy to discuss what can be learned from The Great Depression. Professor Kennedy analyzes the genius of Roosevelt's leadership, the tragedy of Herbert Hoover, the relationship between FDR's short term goals to deal with the economy and his long term goals to establish a new political coalition and create institutions to stabilize American capitalism and more equitably distribute its resources. Kennedy draws parallels with the current global economic crisis and the lessons that the Obama administration could learn from the New Deal. Series: Conversations with History [4/2009] [Public Affairs] [Humanities] [Show ID: 16083]
Cuarto capítulo, de quince, sobre la Historia del siglo XX. Serie emitida originalmente en 1986 por la BBC. En este capítulo trata sobre los EE UU de la Gran Depresión y los esfuerzos de Roosevelt para salir de ella, entre 1933 y 1939 .
No copyright intended this belongs and is sole property of WB, Histeria, and all the crew. My only aim is to put it here for others to enjoy, and to hopefully allow those who have never seen such an awesome series to be able to appreciate it. also one of my favourite Histeria songs! New Deal For You from Histeria Kid Chorus: (starring the voices of) Loud, Aka, Froggo, Charity Here are the lyrics: The stock market went crashing, In 1929 And a deep dark depression, Sent the nation on a fiscal decline Franklin Delanor Roosevelt Had a plan and appeal, Became the U.S. President, And saved the nation with a brand New Deal So if you're living in the Dust Bowl If you don't have a cent If you like government programs But you can't pay the rent If you're standing in a breadline 'Til your feet are ...
Subscribe and like! I add full movies, commercials, random stock footage, and much more, every few days! If you like anything vintage, you'll love this channel! So, subscribe!
Gone Gone Gone Full Album 0:00 Intro 3:09 I Feel Love 7:54 Gone Gone Gone 12:25 Don't Blame Yourself 17:15 Moment #1 18:31 Homewrecker 24:11 A Little While 27:56 Episode 7 32:16 Moment #2 34:13 VL Tone 37:09 Home 43:36 A Little While Longer 49:36 Senza Te Enjoy :)
New Deal/New York episode 3 (60 min.) In his first one hundred days in office, in a effort to stem the effects of the Great Depression, President Roosevelt created many new federal agencies giving jobs and relief to people and transforming the American landscape with public works projects. Nowhere was this transformation more apparent than in Mayor Fiorello La Guardia's New York City. Together Roosevelt and La Guardia expanded and redefined the role of government in the lives of the American people.
FDR introduced a record number of pieces of legislation immediately after being elected during Great Depression. FDR signed the Emergency Banking Act and the Glass-Steagall Act which prohibited the merger of commercial and investment banks in response to the 1933 bank panic. FDR also created the Civilian Conservation Corps which put 250,000 unemployed to work. FDR also signed into law new regulatory powers to the Federal Trade Commission and created the Security and Exchange Commission to regulate Wall Street. $3.3 billion dollars was appropriated to the Public Works Administration to stimulate the economy and create the largest government-owned industrial enterprise in American history -- the Tennessee Valley Authority which built dams and power stations, controlled floods, and modernized...
You can directly support Crash Course at https://www.patreon.com/crashcourse Subscribe for as little as $0 to keep up with everything we're doing. Free is nice, but if you can afford to pay a little every month, it really helps us to continue producing this content. In which John Green teaches you about the New Deal, which was president Franklin D. Roosevelt's plan to pull the united States out of the Great Depression of the 1930's. Did it work? Maybe. John will teach you about some of the most effective and some of the best known programs of the New Deal. They weren't always the same thing. John will tell you who supported the New Deal, and who opposed it. He'll also get into how the New Deal changed the relationship between the government and citizens, and will even reveal just how the ...
APUSH Test Stress? Check out our review! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXrBNizn7PI How it Happened US History FDR's plan for recovery from the Great Depression, the New Deal. Check out the prequel on the Great Depression here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wAZ-RpAO1z4
Grab a spoon and get ready to eat some tasty FDR New Deal soup as HipHughes hop scotches his way through ten alphabet soup policies, court packing, new deal criticisms and a partridge in a pear tree. Super for last minute crammers, curious life ling learners and internet crazies. Love history? Come "like" / follow HipHughes History on Facebook! Play games like "Bad Rhymes" and "Who the Hell am I"? Get you name on the scoreboard and if you're really good win swag prizes like online cred, swag and gansta bragging rights! www.facebook.com/hiphugheshistory Click below for links to tons of edu content creators sure to make you brain twice its size. Subscribe to my fellow EDU Gurus!! AMOR SCIENDI http://www.youtube.com/AmorSciendi ASAP SCIENCE http://www.youtube.com/AsapSCIENCE BOZEMAN B...
Nothing cures a Depression better than a New Deal and Bruno Mars! Learn the major programs of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal! New videos every Tuesday! Like on FaceBook: http://facebook.com/MrBettsClass Follow on Twitter: http://twitter.com/MrBettsClass Instagram: http://instagram.com/MrBettsClass "En la Brisa" Music by Dan-O at http://DanoSongs.com (Franklin, Delano, Delano) This Great Depression Has grown worse, not lessened, We want a new President, 'Cause Hoover's not listening, We're jobless, bankrupt, Living parks in the city, I ate a boot for dinner last night, Won't someone give me some pity? Got a job? (New Deal) NRA gonna get you paid, (Franklin, Delano, Delano) Need a job? (New Deal) Try the CCC or PWA, You a bank? (New Deal) Glass-Steagall says you cannot trade, You fa...
Apart from Germany the United States was the nation hit the hardest by the Great Depression. U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt initiated the New Deal which should be the basis for American economic policies until Reagan's presidency.
Historian Stephen Davies names three persistent myths about the Great Depression. Myth #1: Herbert Hoover was a laissez-faire president, and it was his lack of action that lead to an economic collapse. Davies argues that in fact, Hoover was a very interventionist president, and it was his intervening in the economy that made matters worse. Myth #2: The New Deal ended the Great Depression. Davies argues that the New Deal actually made matters worse. In other countries, the Great Depression ended much sooner and more quickly than it did in the United States. Myth #3: World War II ended the Great Depression. Davies explains that military production is not real wealth.; wars destroy wealth, they do not create wealth. In fact, examination of the historical data reveals that the U.S. economy did...
Aura Music & Arts Festival 2016: The New Deal - Full Set - Amphitheater Stage - Spirit Of The Suwannee Music Park - Live Oak, FL., 3-4-2016, featuring Dan Kurtz (bass), Joel Stouffer (drums), Jamie Shields (keyboard). Recorded by adam @ CHeeSeHeaDPRoDuCTioNS. Best viewed in 720-1080p HD. Setlist: 01) Otter Brown Jam 02) Outer Space Jam into Glide 03) Outrageous Orange Jam 04) Glide Reprise 05) Banter 06) Quattro Part 1 07) Oxford Blue Jam 08) OU Crimson Jam 09) Quattro Part 2 10) Banter 11) Mercury Switch Part 1 12) Pacific Blue Jam 13) VL Tone 14) Pakistan Green Jam into Mercury Switch Part 2 15) Banter 16) Dark One 17) Sabotage the System
Harry Kreisler welcomes Pulitzer Prize winning historian David M. Kennedy to discuss what can be learned from The Great Depression. Professor Kennedy analyzes the genius of Roosevelt's leadership, the tragedy of Herbert Hoover, the relationship between FDR's short term goals to deal with the economy and his long term goals to establish a new political coalition and create institutions to stabilize American capitalism and more equitably distribute its resources. Kennedy draws parallels with the current global economic crisis and the lessons that the Obama administration could learn from the New Deal. Series: Conversations with History [4/2009] [Public Affairs] [Humanities] [Show ID: 16083]
Cuarto capítulo, de quince, sobre la Historia del siglo XX. Serie emitida originalmente en 1986 por la BBC. En este capítulo trata sobre los EE UU de la Gran Depresión y los esfuerzos de Roosevelt para salir de ella, entre 1933 y 1939 .
No copyright intended this belongs and is sole property of WB, Histeria, and all the crew. My only aim is to put it here for others to enjoy, and to hopefully allow those who have never seen such an awesome series to be able to appreciate it. also one of my favourite Histeria songs! New Deal For You from Histeria Kid Chorus: (starring the voices of) Loud, Aka, Froggo, Charity Here are the lyrics: The stock market went crashing, In 1929 And a deep dark depression, Sent the nation on a fiscal decline Franklin Delanor Roosevelt Had a plan and appeal, Became the U.S. President, And saved the nation with a brand New Deal So if you're living in the Dust Bowl If you don't have a cent If you like government programs But you can't pay the rent If you're standing in a breadline 'Til your feet are ...
Subscribe and like! I add full movies, commercials, random stock footage, and much more, every few days! If you like anything vintage, you'll love this channel! So, subscribe!
Gone Gone Gone Full Album 0:00 Intro 3:09 I Feel Love 7:54 Gone Gone Gone 12:25 Don't Blame Yourself 17:15 Moment #1 18:31 Homewrecker 24:11 A Little While 27:56 Episode 7 32:16 Moment #2 34:13 VL Tone 37:09 Home 43:36 A Little While Longer 49:36 Senza Te Enjoy :)
New Deal/New York episode 3 (60 min.) In his first one hundred days in office, in a effort to stem the effects of the Great Depression, President Roosevelt created many new federal agencies giving jobs and relief to people and transforming the American landscape with public works projects. Nowhere was this transformation more apparent than in Mayor Fiorello La Guardia's New York City. Together Roosevelt and La Guardia expanded and redefined the role of government in the lives of the American people.
FDR introduced a record number of pieces of legislation immediately after being elected during Great Depression. FDR signed the Emergency Banking Act and the Glass-Steagall Act which prohibited the merger of commercial and investment banks in response to the 1933 bank panic. FDR also created the Civilian Conservation Corps which put 250,000 unemployed to work. FDR also signed into law new regulatory powers to the Federal Trade Commission and created the Security and Exchange Commission to regulate Wall Street. $3.3 billion dollars was appropriated to the Public Works Administration to stimulate the economy and create the largest government-owned industrial enterprise in American history -- the Tennessee Valley Authority which built dams and power stations, controlled floods, and modernized...
Aura Music & Arts Festival 2016: The New Deal - Full Set - Amphitheater Stage - Spirit Of The Suwannee Music Park - Live Oak, FL., 3-4-2016, featuring Dan Kurtz (bass), Joel Stouffer (drums), Jamie Shields (keyboard). Recorded by adam @ CHeeSeHeaDPRoDuCTioNS. Best viewed in 720-1080p HD. Setlist: 01) Otter Brown Jam 02) Outer Space Jam into Glide 03) Outrageous Orange Jam 04) Glide Reprise 05) Banter 06) Quattro Part 1 07) Oxford Blue Jam 08) OU Crimson Jam 09) Quattro Part 2 10) Banter 11) Mercury Switch Part 1 12) Pacific Blue Jam 13) VL Tone 14) Pakistan Green Jam into Mercury Switch Part 2 15) Banter 16) Dark One 17) Sabotage the System
Gone Gone Gone Full Album 0:00 Intro 3:09 I Feel Love 7:54 Gone Gone Gone 12:25 Don't Blame Yourself 17:15 Moment #1 18:31 Homewrecker 24:11 A Little While 27:56 Episode 7 32:16 Moment #2 34:13 VL Tone 37:09 Home 43:36 A Little While Longer 49:36 Senza Te Enjoy :)
New Deal/New York episode 3 (60 min.) In his first one hundred days in office, in a effort to stem the effects of the Great Depression, President Roosevelt created many new federal agencies giving jobs and relief to people and transforming the American landscape with public works projects. Nowhere was this transformation more apparent than in Mayor Fiorello La Guardia's New York City. Together Roosevelt and La Guardia expanded and redefined the role of government in the lives of the American people.
FDR introduced a record number of pieces of legislation immediately after being elected during Great Depression. FDR signed the Emergency Banking Act and the Glass-Steagall Act which prohibited the merger of commercial and investment banks in response to the 1933 bank panic. FDR also created the Civilian Conservation Corps which put 250,000 unemployed to work. FDR also signed into law new regulatory powers to the Federal Trade Commission and created the Security and Exchange Commission to regulate Wall Street. $3.3 billion dollars was appropriated to the Public Works Administration to stimulate the economy and create the largest government-owned industrial enterprise in American history -- the Tennessee Valley Authority which built dams and power stations, controlled floods, and modernized...
live at Camp Barefoot - Elkins, West Virginia
Harry Kreisler welcomes Pulitzer Prize winning historian David M. Kennedy to discuss what can be learned from The Great Depression. Professor Kennedy analyzes the genius of Roosevelt's leadership, the tragedy of Herbert Hoover, the relationship between FDR's short term goals to deal with the economy and his long term goals to establish a new political coalition and create institutions to stabilize American capitalism and more equitably distribute its resources. Kennedy draws parallels with the current global economic crisis and the lessons that the Obama administration could learn from the New Deal. Series: Conversations with History [4/2009] [Public Affairs] [Humanities] [Show ID: 16083]
Jim Powell joins us for a discussion on the New Deal policies of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Did the New Deal really pull America out of the Great Depression? Did FDR's New Deal policies help pull America out of the Great Depression, or were they in fact responsible for the high unemployment in the country until the beginning of World War II? Jim Powell joins us for a discussion on America's great 20th century experiment with big government. Is the picture we have of the New Deal Era accurate? What was the state of the country leading up to the New Deal? Were these new social programs successful in their goals--and what were their goals in the first place? What are the lessons America learned from the New Deal? Which New Deal programs are still around today? Show Notes and Further Reading J...
Vhs transfer from an original tape with the additional 17 minutes of extra footage after the credits included (45:41), which I guess is like a dvd easter egg... or something. Awesome soundtrack with music from The Odd Numbers, The Bone Shavers & Hemi. Skaters are Steve Douglas, Rick Ibaseta, Paul Schmitt, Armando Barajas, Justin Girard, Tim Braunch, Joby from Sweden, Thomas Taylor, Howell, Brent Fellows, Chris Hall, Andrew Morrison, Danny Sargent, Neal Hendrix, Ed Templeton, Simon Evans, Gorm Boberg, Johnny schilleref.
The Public Works of Art Project gave artists an opportunity to create art during the Great Depression. Co-Curator of the American Art Museum, Ann Wagner, discusses the federal government and its program to support artists, the artists' lives working on the federal pay roll, and select paintings from the exhibition 1934: A New Deal for Artists.
Skate video. You know what this is!
De spraakmakende Griekse ex-minister van Economische zaken Yanis Varoufakis lanceert deze dag de Nederlandse tak van zijn pan-Europese politieke beweging DiEM25 (Democracy in Europe Movement 2025). In het eerste deel van het programma gaan gasten uit de Nederlandse politieke arena met elkaar in gesprek over ‘bouwstenen voor een beter Europa’. Met Alexander Rinnooij Kan (D66), Kathalijne Buitenweg (GroenLinks), Marit Maij (PvdA) en Renske Leijten (SP). In het tweede deel van het avond presenteert Varoufakis samen met de Nederlandse tak van DiEM25 de ‘European New Deal’, een plan voor een nieuwe Europese politiek. Gevolgd door een conversatie met de zaal, die wordt afgetrapt door korte feedback van Josien Pieterse (Network Democracy), Niels Jongerius (Trans National Institute) en Ayaan Abu...
This video is about Chapter 21: The New Deal, 1932-1940 Part 1 and 2 and is intented to accompany a reading of the text for AP US History classes at DSA. For educational use only.
The Great Depression - Episode 3: New Deal, New York (HISTORY DOCUMENTARY) In his first one hundred days in office, in a effort to stem the effects of the . The Great Depression - Episode 3: New Deal, New York (HISTORY DOCUMENTARY) In his first one hundred days in office, in a effort to stem the effects of the . The Great Depression - Episode 3: New Deal, New York (HISTORY DOCUMENTARY) The Great Depression - Episode 3: New Deal, New York (HISTORY . New Deal/New York episode 3 (60 min.) In his first one hundred days in office, in a effort to stem the effects of the Great Depression, President Roosevelt created .
Ch. 33 - The Great Depression and the New Deal
Warning: historian Burt Folsom contradicts your 7th-grade textbook in discussing the actual record of FDR's New Deal. Subscribe to the Tom Woods Show: http://www.TomWoodsRadio.com http://www.TomWoods.com http://www.BurtFolsom.com http://www.LibertyClassroom.com Read Burt Folsom's book, New Deal or Raw Deal: amzn.to/1lpjGtf
This lecture presentation illustrates the progressive politics and legislation in America during the 1930s. After the 1932 & 1936 elections of FDR, democratic controlled Congress sessions passed government programs as social welfare along with anti-business regulations. This time was characterized by taxpayer funded work programs that did not "jump start" the national economy as expected, but offered the unemployed work as a short term solution. In all, the government spent 5 billion dollars in taxpayer money and did not reach their goal of growing the economy. All the while, middle-class American voters argued the president was leading them towards socialism.
I have believed in my convictions
And have been convicted for my beliefs
Conned by the constitution
And harassed by the police.
I've been billed for the bill of rights
And been treated like I was wrong.
I have become a special amendment
For what included me all along.
Like "All men are created equal."
(No amendment needed here)
I've contributed in every field including cotton
From Sunset Strip to Washington Square.
Back during the non-violent era.
I was the only non-violent one.
As a matter of fact there was no non-violence
'cause too many rednecks had guns.
There seems to have been this pattern
That a lot of folks failed to pick up on.
But all black leaders who dared stand up
Wuz in jail, in the courtroom or gone.
Picked up indiscriminately
By the shocktroops of discrimination
To end up in jails or tied up in trails
While dirty tricks soured the nation.
I've been hoodwinked by professional hoods.
My ego has happened to me.
It'll be alright, just keep things cool!"
"And take the people off the street.
We'll settle all this at the conference table.
You just leave everything to me."
Which gets me back to my convictions
And being convicted for my belief
'cause I believe these smiles
in three piece suits
with gracious, liberal demeanor
took our movement off of the streets
and took us to the cleaners
In other words, we let up the pressure
And that was all part of their plan
And every day we allow to slip through our fingers