Harry Truman Essay

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    In 1946 President Harry Truman enacted the National Mental Health Act which provided federal funding for mental asylums (Scott, R. A. & Marks, I. M., 1990). Military veterans were the driving force behind this law and this was the first time that mental illness was getting the spotlight it desperately needed. During the war, our soldiers suffered from traumatic events that were treated moderately by psychiatrist and then they were sent back to the field. After receiving brief treatment, the soldiers

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    War Crimes against Harry Truman Over the course of time there has always been a debate on whether or not Harry Truman should have been convicted of war crimes after the drop of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. People believe Truman was innocent, but at the same time a large amount also believe he should have been punished for his actions. Which side one believes to be true depends on the perspective of the situation. An American might believe President Truman was justified for allowing

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    President Harry Truman was the first president to call for a national health insurance program. His first attempt failed in 1945. He would try again in 1947 and 1949 but failed to make it through Congress. It would be another 20 years before the idea of a national health insurance would come to fruition. On July 30th 1965, President Lyndon Baines Johnson signed Medicare into law. Immediately upon signing the law into effect, President Johnson issued 81 year old former President Harry Truman the very

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    Harry Truman and the Cold War Boom! That was the drop of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan. President Harry Truman decided to drop a five-ton atomic bomb on Hiroshima to make Japan end World War II. On August 6, 1945, the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, and then on August 9, 1945, the United States dropped another bomb on Nagasaki, Japan, officially ending the war (“Harry Truman”). Many believe that bombing Japan was a successful effort in ending World War II. Though it had a positive outcome

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    Moral Dilemmas of President Harry S. Truman The decision to use the atomic bombs posed several significant moral dilemmas, including the loss of many innocent lives, on President Harry S. Truman, as well as, provided many advantages to America, like ending the war. A mutual occurrence was that bombing Japan was the United States trying intimidate other countries. President Harry S. Truman was appointed with the Interim Committee, but Truman, being the leader, was left with all the responsibility

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    In mid 1945 new president Harry Truman had the fate of the United States of America and the world in his hands. Truman faced the biggest decision of his life that would greatly impact not only World War II but the entire concept of war. Truman had to decide whether to use technology that had never been used on man before to obliterate two Japanese cities. On August 6th the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, Japan killing over 100,000 Japanese people. Three days later the second bomb was

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    realize you are on the path of war, the most destructive path in human history. The metaphorical road we walk upon is analogous to the pacific war, a war that became Americas focal point after the fall of the third Reich in Berlin. With this war came Harry Truman’s dilemma, to bomb, or not to bomb. The decision would be questioned for decades to come. The pacific war ended with the first and last atomic bomb to ever be discharged. Although whether Truman’s decision was the right one is arguable, you

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    believed that the heightened fear drove people to distrust one another and it led people to silence their opinions instead of debating and communicating with fellow Americans on their present concerns. The Truman Doctrine by Harry S. Truman was written in 1947 and is a document in which Truman describes typical life in undemocratic nations and why he believed that the United States should provide support for countries in need. The Affluent Society was written by John Kenneth Galbraith in 1958. In

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    Kennedy also had money. Johnson, too, had money, so they never thought it was necessary. Even though he was the 33rd President of the United States, Harry S. Truman left office in 1953 and did not have a pension. I’m not even sure that he was entitled to social security as a federal employee. There was a pension bill, but, for some reason it stagnated. Truman moved to Missouri into the home of his in-laws. Prior to 1958, U.S. Presidents who left office received no federal pension or other financial assistance

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    was the proposed invasion of Japan. Or he could Blockade Japan, this would mean he would block the shores of Japan and prevent them from getting any new supplies, and wait for them to surrender to the US. In my opinion, I do agree with President Harry Truman's decision to drop the bombs. I think it was the best choice, it

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