A term used by President Richard Nixon to indicate his belief that the great body of Americans supported his policies and that those who demonstrated against the involvement of the United States in the Vietnam War amounted to only a noisy minority.
The Silent Majority was a term used by President Nixon to describe the moderate Americans who did not participate in public protests during the 1960s and 1970s. It referred to those who supported traditional values and government policies but did not actively voice their opinions.
A member of the silent majority does not actively participate in public discourse or demonstrate vocal opposition to prevailing societal views or policies.
Silent Majority
Silent Majority - comics - was created in 1984.
A member of the silent majority is not necessarily someone who is passive or uninvolved in societal issues. They may choose not to voice their opinions publicly, but they can still actively engage in various forms of political or social participation.
False. The Silent Majority refers to a term used by President Richard Nixon in the 1960s and 1970s to describe a group of Americans who were assumed to have more conservative political and social views. While some members of this group may have been Christians who interpreted the Bible literally and believed in absolute standards of right and wrong, the Silent Majority was not solely comprised of Christians or exclusively defined by religious beliefs.
Silent Majority
Nixon himself was not called the silent majority he was calling the average non protesting american the silent majority.
Middle class.
Silent Majority
Oligarchy
I have no idea that is why i am asking you