Shoutout to the one guy I can count on either weeks in advance, or the night before a test to get me great information where I actually understand it!!!
TIMESTAMPS 1:21 Hawley-Smoot Tariff 1:31 Buying on Margin 2:08 Great Depression 2:19 Hoovervilles 2:41 Franklin D. Roosevelt 3:13 Limited Welfare State 3:23 New Deal 5:31 Social Security Act of 1935 6:43 Court Packing Scheme
heimler, you are a godsend to all ap students in need of easy, accessible material to study. tysm for all your hard work... i and my ap class are indebted to you. if possible, i think it would be really cool for all this info to be in podcast form someday so that people can simply listen to it instead of watching the videos (or in addition to watching them). thank you again sm you cannot understand how much you are blessing the ap history realm
I'm in college taking an American history class...Thank you so much for these videos!! You make everything so understable and clear. It's been a lifesaver this semester.
can u give a shoutout to mr.gesuldo's ap world history class?? we are all huge fans of u. well mostly just me and ella who also comments on ur videos but still. keep the content coming!!
Thanks Hiemler I always watch your videos for my APUSH class and I’m so grateful that you have these videos because they helped get a 5 on my AP World History: Modern exam last year and this year I hope to get a 5 on the APUSH AP exam too thank you 😊
i am so grateful for your videos, but this topic is akin to the sentiments that most apush student possesses when they are dying mentally because of this course's workload and vast expanse of knowledge required for us to be obtained
Your videos are really helpful. Just an FYI, Hoover did try to regulate the economy after the crash, e.g., the Hawley Smoot Tariff. That resulted in other nations retaliating with their own tariffs, which crippled U.S. trade, making the economic situation even worse. Thus government regulation of the economy made the situation worse, not better. Calvin Coolidge was a proponent of "laissez faire", and the economy was prosperous during his presidency...
Hoover didn't try to regulate the economy until 1930, nearly an entire year after the stock-market crash. As a proponent of the laissez-faire economic system himself, he only tried to administer legislative action after he realized that the economy wouldn't fix itself. If you research more about the underlying causes of the Great Depression, you can see that this policy that Calvin Coolidge practiced of hands-off business would ultimately lead to such severe depression.
@@cherylgrey4044 The stock market collapsed on October 24, 1929. The aforementioned Hawley-Smoot Tariff was signed by Hoover in June of 1930. Thus, it is fair to say that Hoover originally advocated a laissez faire approach for a few months until he signed the tariff into law. The tariff was clearly an act of government intervention, the opposite of laissez faire, and by signing it into law, he crippled U.S. trade by initiating a trade war with other nations. In short, Hoover initially did not intervene, but when he did intervene a few months after, he made the financial situation much worse than it originally had been.
@@okayriley I'm asking, because I'm interested to know. I'm assuming it would be high rates of tax, but I don't know for sure. Maybe you could help me out.
@@colinbrown7305 pasted this from google: "All the New Deal programs were paid for, and run by, the Government. This meant that the Government's debt grew a great deal. The U.S. debt was $22 billion in 1933 and grew by 50 percent in the three years that followed, reaching $33 billion."
@@colinbrown7305 pasted from google: "All the New Deal programs were paid for, and run by, the Government. This meant that the Government's debt grew a great deal. The U.S. debt was $22 billion in 1933 and grew by 50 percent in the three years that followed, reaching $33 billion."
@@colinbrown7305It was payed for by the government. Franklin D. Roosevelt used the tactic of deficit spending to give billions of US government money to the New Deal. Deficit spending is when the government spends enough to exceed its revenue, which did leave the government in debt but did carry out effective new deal programs. Fact check this on google if you wish! They used the U.S. government budget.
Because of you, I am not depressed
ur cute
@@melo7572 the down horrendous rizz
John 14:21
@@brodiemorris2081 mb
@@melo7572 keep it in check
day before ap exam. only on unit 7 and im coooked
ur cooked gang
me too 😭
Shoutout to the one guy I can count on either weeks in advance, or the night before a test to get me great information where I actually understand it!!!
I have no words for how grateful I am for what you do I am buying all of your stuff because you have done so much to help students. Thank you!
TIMESTAMPS
1:21 Hawley-Smoot Tariff
1:31 Buying on Margin
2:08 Great Depression
2:19 Hoovervilles
2:41 Franklin D. Roosevelt
3:13 Limited Welfare State
3:23 New Deal
5:31 Social Security Act of 1935
6:43 Court Packing Scheme
If you need time stamps to make it through a 8 minute video you got a problem.
@@jameskennedy6227 its mainly for those taking notes so they know what to take notes on, why r u so bitter ?? 😭
heimler, you are a godsend to all ap students in need of easy, accessible material to study. tysm for all your hard work... i and my ap class are indebted to you. if possible, i think it would be really cool for all this info to be in podcast form someday so that people can simply listen to it instead of watching the videos (or in addition to watching them). thank you again sm you cannot understand how much you are blessing the ap history realm
I'm in college taking an American history class...Thank you so much for these videos!! You make everything so understable and clear. It's been a lifesaver this semester.
I’m really glad to hear they’re useful beyond AP! Good luck!
You are a lifesaver! Im teaching a class tomorrow as a trial run and im teaching the great depression! Thank you!
The high here today in Minnesota was -2 and you are the only thing getting me through
My great-grandfather was a World War One veteran and he worked for the WPA.
He used to call it the We Piddle Around.
😂
They were paid puddle too.
"baby you got a stew going"
I'm also an Arrested Development enthusiast
Love it when someone picks that up :)
@@heimlershistory YES! WHY DO SO FEW PEOPLE GET THE REFERENCE?!?
sending this to my teacher so she can play it for the class on tuesday because it helped me understand sm better
MY FAVORITE GAP TOOTH BALD GUY! WOO-HOO!! CAN I GET AN OWA OWA?
owa owa!
owa owa!
Why won’t this get out of my recommendations. The universe still finds ways to remind me to get off RUclips and do my 10 overdue assignments.
😂
You are a legend... I cannot put your excellence into words! ;)
good luck to everyone i feel like is now my friend tomorrow. Hopefully we wont need it
can u give a shoutout to mr.gesuldo's ap world history class?? we are all huge fans of u. well mostly just me and ella who also comments on ur videos but still. keep the content coming!!
lmao period 7 test tomorrow and American Pageant has not been opened... thank you sir
how does it feel now that you never have to touch that book again?
it's been 11 months, be grateful you're not in apush anymore
Thanks Hiemler I always watch your videos for my APUSH class and I’m so grateful that you have these videos because they helped get a 5 on my AP World History: Modern exam last year and this year I hope to get a 5 on the APUSH AP exam too thank you 😊
i am so grateful for your videos, but this topic is akin to the sentiments that most apush student possesses when they are dying mentally because of this course's workload and vast expanse of knowledge required for us to be obtained
hours before the exam oh boy
Will you be uploading a video at the end of the year as a review
This is the first time I had to watch one of your videos this year and I missed you lol
Your videos are really helpful. Just an FYI, Hoover did try to regulate the economy after the crash, e.g., the Hawley Smoot Tariff. That resulted in other nations retaliating with their own tariffs, which crippled U.S. trade, making the economic situation even worse. Thus government regulation of the economy made the situation worse, not better. Calvin Coolidge was a proponent of "laissez faire", and the economy was prosperous during his presidency...
Hoover didn't try to regulate the economy until 1930, nearly an entire year after the stock-market crash. As a proponent of the laissez-faire economic system himself, he only tried to administer legislative action after he realized that the economy wouldn't fix itself. If you research more about the underlying causes of the Great Depression, you can see that this policy that Calvin Coolidge practiced of hands-off business would ultimately lead to such severe depression.
@@cherylgrey4044 The stock market collapsed on October 24, 1929. The aforementioned Hawley-Smoot Tariff was signed by Hoover in June of 1930. Thus, it is fair to say that Hoover originally advocated a laissez faire approach for a few months until he signed the tariff into law. The tariff was clearly an act of government intervention, the opposite of laissez faire, and by signing it into law, he crippled U.S. trade by initiating a trade war with other nations. In short, Hoover initially did not intervene, but when he did intervene a few months after, he made the financial situation much worse than it originally had been.
night before exam
good luck
howd it go gang
if you ever stop making videos, i will surely fail any of my ap history courses :)
hey hey hey hey hey heimler
Hi, I read something about the AAA, can you go further into that, thanks for everything Heimler, got a 5 on my apwh exam because of you
Hey thanks man for helping
heimler! heimler!heimler!heimler! can u say hi alyssa? big fan!
Great video! Keep up the great work!
Love you ddy
This information is great. However, what people never talk about is how the New Deal was paid for.
How?
@@okayriley I'm asking, because I'm interested to know.
I'm assuming it would be high rates of tax, but I don't know for sure. Maybe you could help me out.
@@colinbrown7305 pasted this from google: "All the New Deal programs were paid for, and run by, the Government. This meant that the Government's debt grew a great deal. The U.S. debt was $22 billion in 1933 and grew by 50 percent in the three years that followed, reaching $33 billion."
@@colinbrown7305 pasted from google: "All the New Deal programs were paid for, and run by, the Government. This meant that the Government's debt grew a great deal. The U.S. debt was $22 billion in 1933 and grew by 50 percent in the three years that followed, reaching $33 billion."
@@colinbrown7305It was payed for by the government. Franklin D. Roosevelt used the tactic of deficit spending to give billions of US government money to the New Deal. Deficit spending is when the government spends enough to exceed its revenue, which did leave the government in debt but did carry out effective new deal programs. Fact check this on google if you wish! They used the U.S. government budget.
History sure is Rhyming lately
The Hawley-Smoot Tariff was passed in 1930, but the stock market crashed in 1929. Hmmm...
Love you
Please don't milk my brain cows :(((((((((((((((
Fair enough.... I shall refrain.
"social security is going strong today"
-social security admin admits they are going to be broke within a decade
Ap is in 1 minute😮
Jamarcus Throughway
About to take my end of quarter exam but I didnt read the chapters😅
Lollll how’d your quarter exam go?
3:22
can you say “hi ella’s teacher”?
I love you
i still buy on margin when i day trade stocks, the scc didn't work 😎
Buy! Buy! Buy!!!!
But what if the market doesn’t keep going up?
Sell! Sell! Sell!!!!
Fellow oversimplified fan
Love this guy
You are bestttttt 👍👍👍😄😄😄
I thought they would call the towns pooperville 😅
Uh… hello? Based department?
early