The US was still recovering from WW2 when Korea erupted. This is part of the reason Korea is known as the "forgotten war", it has been overshadowed by WW2. There was less than 5 years of (peace) time between the Korean War and WW2.
Now? or in 1953?
Most Americans don't realize that there is still a war going on! They think Koreans are on the brink of another Korean war.
However, the vast majority of Americans just don't know. they don't know what to think about it because they don't fully understand the situation.
i would say that the public opinion is that "Kim Jong-il is bad and he should be stopped" but that is as far is it goes, because no one knows how or when it would even be possible without massive casualties in the south.
also most peeps think that kim is his first name :P
Generally, it was negative. There was much more protest activity, but at the same time, there was a very unpopular draft. If Mr. Bush tries to put a draft into place now, I think protests would kick in again...
did the american public think that the korean war was woth fighting?
it's the small war that very few people understand. but most would see it as a weak win ...
Public opinion in which country? Many countries were involved.
The public opinion was that the USA should not be involved in a civil war ...
Muhammad Ali was the first person to openly speak to the public about his outrage of the war. His protests started in 1966 when he famously stated, "I ain't got no quarrel with the Vietcong. No Vietcong ever called me n_____." He lost everything (his boxing title and boxing competitions in the future!) as he refused the draft which was illegal during the Vietnam War. After him, the public started to speak their outrage to the war after watching Muhammad Ali declare his opinion. However, many of the public's opinion was based nearly entirely on the media. The media was often biased towards the journalist's opinion on the war.
yes. up to that time war was thought of as glorious instead of violent. the media uncovered the true cruelty and violence of war.
Members of society were being drafted to fight the Vietnam War; consequently, they were against it.
Lyndon Johnson did not run for a third term largely because of opposition to the Vietnam War from his own party as well as outside.
With increasing dissaproval as the war dragged on.
it helped to get public opinion.
The "public" was being drafted into military service; which influenced public opinion, which in turn influenced the protests and riots against the war.
It lowered morale.
Muhammad Ali was the first person to openly speak to the public about his outrage of the war. His protests started in 1966 when he famously stated, "I ain't got no quarrel with the Vietcong. No Vietcong ever called me n_____." He lost everything (his boxing title and boxing competitions in the future!) as he refused the draft which was illegal during the Vietnam War. After him, the public started to speak their outrage to the war after watching Muhammad Ali declare his opinion. However, many of the public's opinion was based nearly entirely on the media. The media was often biased towards the journalist's opinion on the war.
Marketing takes money.
The Vietnam War=the military draft!
As was the American people, the UN was divided on the Vietnam War.
We don't have the image you were given so the question can't be answered.
U.S public opinion on the Vietnam war became increasingly negative
US involvement in the Vietnam War extended from the fear of communism held by the population. Being fearful that a spread in communism was occurring and that Vietnam was the first in a domino effect, the American public supported US intervention to contain the threat of communism. Once initiated, it was realized that there were many American lives being lost without a necessity to have been lost. A major event that turned public opinion against the war was the Tet Offensive, and seeing the carnage through media sources on the battlefield.
The Vietnam War was the first war to be televised to the public. So America saw everything that was going on in Vietnam and wanted to pull out of the war.
Members of society were being drafted to fight the Vietnam War; consequently, they were against it.