One of the major accomplishments of the Great Society was passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The Act put the power of the federal government behind the rights of blacks and other minorities to vote. The creation of the Office of Economic Opportunity funded a Jobs Corps that retrained unemployed people for new kinds of jobs available in technology. Head Start provided education to the families that were too poor to send children to day care or preschool. VISTA was a domestic peace corps. Volunteers in Service to America. Low cost student loans became available. Funding of schools, colleges, and universities allowed more middle and lower income groups to go to continue their education.
The Great Society's legacy is considered mixed because while it introduced important social programs and policies like Medicare and Medicaid, there were also criticisms of the expansion of government involvement and concerns about the cost and effectiveness of some programs. Additionally, racial tensions and other societal challenges persisted despite the aims of the Great Society initiatives.
Well, for short-term yes, long-term no. First let me just say, The great society was a domestic program that was intended to end poverty, racial discrimination, create more schools and education, better medical care, and help the economy. President Lyndon B. Johnson created this program after John F. Kennedy was assassinated. Some things from his program are still in use today like Medicare and Medicaid, others were very helpful to minorities like the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and education opportunities. So it did not last though because we entered the Vietnam war and it just strained the economy. P.S--> I hope that helped answer your question.
While there are restrictions on where felons can live, there are halfway houses and reentry programs that provide support and housing for individuals reentering society after incarceration. These programs often offer resources such as job training, counseling, and assistance with finding permanent housing. Additionally, some communities may have organizations or shelters that are willing to help felons in need of housing.
The New Deal was a series of domestic programs designed to get Americans back on their feet after the Great Depression. Blacks were hit especially hard by the loss of jobs; some programs in the New Deal inadvertently hurt them, but the administration tried to help their plight. At first, most of the New Deal programs targeted men because they considered them the head of the household. Later programs included women.
Some of the social reforms implemented by Akbar the Great include promoting religious tolerance and the integration of different cultures, supporting the welfare of his subjects through land reforms and improved infrastructure, and fostering a more inclusive society through the abolishment of taxes based on religion and the outlawing of discrimination against lower castes.
The Great Society's legacy is considered mixed because while it introduced important social programs and policies like Medicare and Medicaid, there were also criticisms of the expansion of government involvement and concerns about the cost and effectiveness of some programs. Additionally, racial tensions and other societal challenges persisted despite the aims of the Great Society initiatives.
some successes were that massachusetts became a state ( i think)
Advantages of the Great Society include implementing important social programs like Medicare and Medicaid, increasing funding for education, and addressing poverty and civil rights issues. However, disadvantages include concerns about the expansion of government power, criticism of some programs for being costly and ineffective, and debates over the role of government in social welfare.
Some of the top programs in the University of Cincinnati are the CCM, Conservatory College of Music, music and dance program which is world renowned, the DAAP, the school of design which is also nationally renowned, and the Criminal Justice program are some of the top programs, but all of UC programs are great programs to be involved in because of the great community the university has and also the great professors.
Well, for short-term yes, long-term no. First let me just say, The great society was a domestic program that was intended to end poverty, racial discrimination, create more schools and education, better medical care, and help the economy. President Lyndon B. Johnson created this program after John F. Kennedy was assassinated. Some things from his program are still in use today like Medicare and Medicaid, others were very helpful to minorities like the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and education opportunities. So it did not last though because we entered the Vietnam war and it just strained the economy. P.S--> I hope that helped answer your question.
So of Leonard successes are the mona Lisa and the do Vinci code
The Higher Education ActThe war on poverty.Formation of medicareAnother TakeIt is not possible to calculate the true cost of LBJ's Great Society programs. Considering just one such program, MediCare, the unfunded mandate measures in the tens of trillions of dollars. MedicAid, another Johnson brainchild, is just as bad off. Social Security, Johnson's model, has been bankrupt almost since its founding in 1935; only "creative" accounting by Congress has maintained its flimsy reputation as some sort of 'trust fund,' funded of course with worthless federal paper. Generations to come will reckon the cost of the Great Society programs.
Some of the youth crew programs in Connecticut includes drama festivals and sports activities. Such programs help the youths to identify their talents and make great use of them.
he made the navy =]
It wasnt
Harvard by far has the highest ranked MBA program in the nation. Stanford and USC also have some great programs as well.
The Higher Education ActThe war on poverty.Formation of medicareAnother TakeIt is not possible to calculate the true cost of LBJ's Great Society programs. Considering just one such program, MediCare, the unfunded mandate measures in the tens of trillions of dollars. MedicAid, another Johnson brainchild, is just as bad off. Social Security, Johnson's model, has been bankrupt almost since its founding in 1935; only "creative" accounting by Congress has maintained its flimsy reputation as some sort of 'trust fund,' funded of course with worthless federal paper. Generations to come will reckon the cost of the Great Society programs.