"Lessons we have learned about cultural and social contexts from vietnam war" Essays and Research Papers

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    The Vietnam war had a huge effect on the outcomes of the Vietnamese people. According to the Migration Policy website‚ Vietnamese Immigration on the United States‚ Was small one prior to 1795‚ and it has grown a lot. And it has roughly been doubling every decade in 1980-2000. And it has been increasing 26 percent in 2000. And Vietnamese represented the sixth largest immigrant group in the country‚ and those who were born in Mexico‚ India ‚ China. Every year the Vietnamese Immigration has been growing

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    How did the opponents of the Vietnam War affect the Vietnam Era? “After a massive 250‚000 “March of Death” protest in Washington‚ the New Zealand and Australia peace movements decided to do the same. The first moratorium was held in 1970.” Impacts on Australia In Australia‚ resistance to the war was at first very limited‚ although the Australian Labor Party (in opposition for most of the period) steadfastly opposed conscription. However‚ anti-war sentiment escalated rapidly in the late 1960s as

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    Tim Page: The Vietnam War

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    In the 1950’s‚ the United States began to send troops to Vietnam‚ during the following 25-year period‚ the ensuing war would create some of the strongest tensions in US history. Almost 3 million US men and women were sent thousands of miles to fight for what was a questionable cause. In total‚ it is estimated that over 2‚5 million people on both sides were killed. This site does not try to document the entire history of the Vietnam War but is intended as a picture essay‚ illustrating some of

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    Conflict in focus The war in Vietnam had been called the defining experience for the United States in the second half of the 20th century which was the longest and bloodiest world conflict in history. Vietnam war was the defining aspect of his life. He himself perceived that and was driven through the rest of his days to characterize‚ explain‚ rationalize and defend that role memoirs reflect the fixation in a long career totaling 36 years as an officer in a string of postings to increasingly important

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    All Through the Vietnam War‚ draft avoidance and resistance came to a peak‚ nearly crippling the Selective Service System. Joined with the rebellion inside the military and the greater civilian antiwar movement‚ draft resistance became yet another shackle on the government’s ability to wage a war in Vietnam‚ and brought the war home in a very personal way for a generation of young men. Many draft resisters filed for conscientious objector status‚ didn’t report for induction when called‚ or attempted

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    the main purpose of reuniting North and South Vietnam. The Vietcong was able to defeat the French and then the South Vietnamese army‚ having American forces supporting their defense. As the attacks began encroaching Saigon‚ U.S. Colonel Michael Macmahon held Mai’s sponsorship for a safe extraction out of danger. Soon after‚ Mai’s mother Thanh‚ would join her in the United States in 1975. As Mai and Thanh escape a complicated situation in South Vietnam‚ they’re confronted with an equally complicated

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    Voices from Vietnam Voices from Vietnam‚ a book by Barry Denenberg to some it can be comforting‚ some gruesome‚ and to some informative. This book is not just a group of facts with the main events of the war‚ it talks with many different people that had very important jobs during the war. To me this book was very informative because I knew very little about the war. A few well known people have writings in this book such as President Dwight D. Eisenhower. It is very interesting to see the very

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    uncomfortable with the values and attitudes presented in texts” Compare the extent to which the values and attitudes that you encountered‚ in at least two texts on your comparative course‚ made you feel uncomfortable. A. The texts i have chosen to write about is the play Sive by John B Keane‚ the novel How Many Miles To Babylon? (Babylon) by Jennifer Johnson and the film Im Not Scared (INS) directed by Gabriele Salvatores. In the play Sive‚ Mena is a powerful women who controls her husband

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    role in covering the war in the most objective‚ bias-free and truthful manner‚ even if negative stories have to be reported. In this essay‚ the comparison of media coverage between the Vietnam War and Gulf War II has four areas to cover‚ which are the freedom of correspondents‚ embedding‚ the reliability and quality of the coverage. The media also plays the role of a "watchdog" in observing the government closely and reporting their actions. With the U.S. in Vietnam‚ the American people

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    been in war with Vietnam for four years when Nixon took office in 1969. Already more than thirty- six thousand Americans have lost their lives only up to 1968 and the United States had a total of 475‚200 forces in Vietnam. Nixon was determined to bring America out of this problem; unlike past President Lyndon Johnson. Very early in Nixon’s presidency‚ he made the decision to order the air force to bomb Cambodian territory in order to destroy enemy sanctuaries‚ but he kept this secret from the American

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