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Published byWilfred McDaniel Modified over 8 years ago
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Activator Review questions: 1. Do you think government regulation (passing laws that tell business what to do) is a good thing? 2. Why is competition between business good for the consumer (the person who buys things)? 3. If a trust or cartel is set up to destroy business competition, should government stop them? 4. What was the most important thing the Progressives did?
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Agenda Activator, Agenda, and Objective (10 minutes) Regulation, Trusts, and Progressives notes (15 minutes). Debate (20 minutes) Resolved: Government should regulate big business. Post-Debate Summative Assessment (30 minutes) Exit ticket
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Trusts and Cartels TRUST: A group of companies run by a board of trustees set up by a business leader so they can control market and get rid of competition. Mainly formed to eliminate business competition. Example: John Rockefeller buying up all the small oil refineries until he owned over 90% of the oil refineries in the U.S. but running them under a board of trustees. CARTELS: A group of independently owned business that agree to set prices at a certain level.
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Progressives Goals: 1. Government should listen to citizens more. 2. Government should restrict wealthy from having too much power. 3. Government should be more involved in improving people’s lives (workers rights, welfare, care for elderly). 4. Government should be less corrupt and more efficient in order to take on this expanded role.
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Progressives Regulations: 1. Meat packing – (Sinclair’s Jungle) – sanitary conditions – food inspections. 2. City government reform – attacking the bosses. 3. Running utilities and providing welfare services like parks, pools, etc. 4. TR’s Square Deal – threatened to take over coal industry. Antitrust activism – prevented companies from buying up the stock of smaller companies to create a monopoly. 5. Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act. 6. Department of Labor – Children’s Bureau and Women’s Bureau. 7. 16 th amendment: allows federal government to collect taxes.
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Debate Should government regulate business? Regulation: Government making laws restricting what business can do. Goes against laissez faire capitalism. Affirmative: Argues yes government should regulate. Negative: Argues no government should not regulate.
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Debate format 1. Affirmative Speech 2. Negative Cross Examination 3. Negative Speech 4. Affirmative Cross Examination 5. Affirmative Rebuttal 6. Negative Rebuttal
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11.2.5 and 11.2.9 Summative Assessment Should the government regulate big business? Pick a side and argue it. Use specific examples of cartels and trusts. Discuss what you think is the best argument on the other side. 11.2.5 Students discuss corporate mergers that produced trusts and cartels and the economic and political policies of industrial leaders. 11.2.9 Students understand the response of the Progressives.
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Exit Ticket We meet Monday, Wednesday, Friday next week. There will be a multiple choice exam next Wednesday. I want to give you plenty of time to study. Begin completing the study guide provided. This should be fully completed and turned in before class on the day of the exam.
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Questions 1. The early efforts of the American Federation of Labor focused on 2. The main benefit gained by unions during the late Nineteenth Century was 3. During the late 1800s, the reason labor unions had difficulty achieving their goals was that 4. What was needed as a result of rapid urbanization? 5. Immigrants arriving between 1880 and 1900 settled in cities along the eastern coast because…
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