The Cold War: East vs. West
Examine the who, what, where, when and whys of this great post-WWII conflict.
In the parliamentary system, a king or queen serves as figure head of the country, while the main leader is the Prime Minister who isn’t elected. The party is elected, and the head of the party becomes the Prime Minister. In coalitions, if no party wins in an election, a coalition is formed, where smaller parties join together to share the power. This lasts until one of these parties doesn’t want to continue sharing the power, forcing another election. In a democracy, the power lies with the people through elections. All of these different governments were tried in Europe.
Although the Soviet Union didn’t want it, The Marshall Plan still gave a boost to many countries economies. During 1950-1970 the per capita income, or average income per person, rose. This rose because of countries rebuilding their factories with latest technology, increased trade due to greater peace and trust because of NATO, and greater production making more things available to sell.
Although many changes happened in Europe after the war, challenges remained.
Welfare states were created. The government was responsible for the citizens’ well being. Free housing and medical insurance, unemployment insurance and pension had to be provided by the government. This made taxes very high.
In the 1970s and 1980s economies everywhere slowed down, making it hard for countries to provide services. During this time, the government wanted to raise taxes. When they couldn’t do that, they cut the services, like the police and fire.
While Germany was separated, West Germany became a major economic and political force. East Germany, the Soviet puppet, remained poor. In the late 1980s, things got worse in the Soviet Union and the East German government collapsed. In November 1989, the West German people pushed past the guards and began smashing down the wall. In October of 1990, Germany once again reunited and became one country.
The coming down of the Berlin wall was a great world event. People would go to wall just to get piece of it. As great as this was, it created problems. The East was way behind the West and some things in the West were never seen in the East before. Training for jobs was needed. Even though they were united, there was a gap between the two sides of Germany. Another problem was the past, and the Holocaust. People wanted to forget but the others want to learn. The youth wanted to learn because they wanted to know how to prevent it.
European countries needed to compete, but the only way to do that was to unite. As a result, the European Union, or EU for short, was created. Under EU, goods could be traded between members free from taxes. In 1999 the Euro was introduced as a common form of currency for all European countries.
Although Europe seemed unified, they faced new challenges. The first was nationalism, and there was also societal, cultural, security, and women’s rights challenges. In nationalism, the people didn’t want to unite. In society, many people moved from the farms to the city. In culture, Germany still had problems with the West Germans thinking they were better than the people in the East, calling themselves Easties and Westies. In Ireland, there were feuds between the Catholics and Protestants. And in Italy, the north was richer than the south.
Overall, the Cold War was slow. There were times where the people were so afraid of a nuclear war that they couldn’t watch the news. But most of the time, the Cold War was just a bluff between the US and the Soviet Union, and it wasn’t a brutal war. It was more of a technology war, where the countries involved competed with each other to produce technological advances. If there wasn’t a Cold War, we might not have had the things we have today.
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Post Commentheyo
On July 20, 2009 at 1:46 pm
does this comment box work?