Monday, January 30, 2012

AP US Gov Public Opinion Notes

1/30/12      
How are candidates chosen for the presidential election?
I.               What is the difference between a primary and a caucus?
A.             States decide whether they have a primary or a caucus
B.             Primary
1.             You walk into a voting booth and vote for a nominee for a political party to run in an election
2.             It’s like any other election
3.             First introduced in the early 1910-20s progressive era (people wanted more democracy and more influence over government- we got to vote for senators directly during this period), but took hold in the 1960s
4.             Three types of primaries- up to the individual states to decide
a)             Open primary- anyone can vote in the primary.  You don’t need to be a member of that party to vote
b)             Closed primary- you have to be a member of the political party to vote in the primary
c)             Blanket primary- like voting in a general election.  You can switch back and forth in parties for different offices like in a general election (no states use this anymore)
5.             Secret Ballot
C.            Caucus
1.             Instead of going to a booth to vote, people gather in a room and debate the nominees and then write down who they vote for
2.             Takes a few hours, so they are more influenced by activists who are heavily involved in the political process, especially caucuses because they require a commitment
3.             Publicly voting
D.            Front-loading- when states try move up their primary date to have more influence
1.             If a state tries to make its primary too early/before Iowa and New Hampshire, the national party might punish the state and not allow its delegates to vote at the national convention
2.             This year, Florida moved up its primary so as a punishment only half their delegates can go and vote at the convention (this also happened in 2008)
II.              How were presidential candidates picked before the primary system?
A.             Party caucuses in Congress picked presidential candidates (occurred up until the 1820s)
B.             1820s- set up National Nominating Conventions, where each party would meet and choose the candidate for their party to run in the election
1.             For the first 100 years it was the party elites who would be at the conventions and choose the nominees (average people did not have a say)
a)             Convention was exciting because you did not know who would get the nomination
2.             In the 1920s primaries and caucuses were adopted and gave people a say in choosing nominees.  It became widely accepted in the 1960s.  The party bosses did not have all the power, the people had a voice too
1/31/12
III.            The National Convention
A.             Occurs 2 months before the general election in October
B.             Before we had primaries, the conventions were very important because the nominees were picked at the conventions.  Now that we have primaries and caucuses, we usually know who the nominee is going to be
C.            What is the purpose of the convention today if it is not about picking the candidates?
1.             Sometimes they announce and formerly introduce the vice presidential nominee
2.             Motivate the party to get support for the election
3.             Officially introduce the nominee
4.             Write the party platform- the party’s goals and beliefs
D.            Brokered Convention- if no candidate gets a majority of delegates
1.             Each delegate is sent to the convention pledged to vote for a certain candidate who they are loyal to.  Each candidate gets a certain amount of delegates based on how many votes they got in the primary/caucus for each state (if a state has proportional primary/caucus a candidate gets delegates based on the percent of votes he got in a primary/caucus.  If a state has winner takes all primary/caucus the candidate who wins gets all the delegates for that state to the convention)
2.             Going into the convention you don’t know who the nominee is
3.             The Delegates go and cast their first vote to the candidate they pledged loyalty, and then after the first vote if no candidate gets a majority the delegates can vote for anyone they want
E.             The democratic party has superdelegates
1.             They are not pledged to vote for a certain candidate.  They can vote for whoever they want and can swing an election against the will of the primary/caucus voters
2.             Consist of Democratic members of Congress and democrats who served in office
3.             The democratic party created it to check the liberal wing of the democratic party.  The superdelegates make sure no one too liberal is nominated to run in the presidential election because they know someone who is too liberal could not win the national vote
2/1/12
IV.            Religion and US Politics
A.             Religion plays a major role in US politics and policy, unlike other democracies where religion is pushed to the side
B.             More people in the US consider themselves religious than people in other countries
1.             People in Europe would laugh that our political debates include disagreement over saying “under G-d” in the Pledge of Allegiance, and faith based programs (most religious people think it is ok for government money to go to churches/synagogues that have charity organizations).  In Europe, people don’t want their tax money going to religious organizations- there is a bitterness towards religious institutions
2.             We are unique for out culture war
a)             Other countries are all about class warfare.  In the US its all about culture wars
b)             Cultural issues over values are what distinguish us, not classes
2/3/12
C.            The Culture Wars
1.             Began in the 60s
a)             People began questioning American values (civil rights, feminism)
b)             People were moving away from religion and were not so conservative anymore.  More people were becoming progressive, questioning traditional values and refusing to conform
2.             Orthodox viewpoint
a)             Morality is consistent over time and does not change.  There are absolute truths that do not change
b)             Keep the same rules otherwise society will fall apart
c)             Traditional morality is more important that individual rights
d)             Religion holds society together by providing absolute values to live by
3.             Progressive viewpoint
a)             Believe that change is ok
b)             Individual rights need to be respected and are more important than traditional morals
4.             How real is the culture wars?
a)             Some feel the culture wars are played up by the political parties to get people to vote
2/6/12
Factors that affect public opinion
V.             Different regions of the country
A.             The Northeast tends to be more liberal- even Republicans in the NE tend to be moderate of liberal on social issues
B.             Upper Midwest (Industrial/rust belt) is a liberal area on economic issues (because of all the factories and union members), but can be conservative on social issues (because they are Catholic)
C.            South (bible belt) is heavily Republican/conservative because the Protestants live there.  The trend of the South becoming Republican took hold in the 1960s when LBJ, a democrat from the south, signed the Civil Rights Act
D.            Rocky mountain states tend to be very conservative
E.             West Coast tends to be liberal
VI.            Religion
A.             *The most important form of political socialization is the family- we get our political views through religion in our family
B.             The more religious you are in a group, the more conservative you tend to be
C.            Jews tend to be liberal on economic and social issues
1.             Social status- when Jews came to this country they weren’t treated well, and were helped by the Democrats, so they felt a sense of loyalty to the Democrats
2.             This doesn’t apply as much today because most Jews aren’t poor
3.             Jews feels a responsibility to the community as a whole, so they follow the Democratic party that provides for people
4.             History of Jews and what they went through makes them wary about the government having the power to tell people how to live
D.            Catholics
1.             Liberal on economic issues
a)             Were persecuted when they came to this country, so government help built loyalty to the Democrats
b)             Very into charity (they need it to get into heaven) and believe the government has a role in that
2.             Conservative on social issues
3.             So who do they vote for? 
a)             In the 70s and 80s the trend was for Catholics to move to the Republican party because the Democratic party was becoming too liberal (“Reagan Democrats”)
E.             Protestants
1.             Conservative on economic and social issues
2.             Don’t have the same social mission (to make the world a better place) as Jews and Catholics
a)             They were always the top people in the country
b)             Faith alone is the way to get to heaven, and no hierarchy of religious leaders.  It’s all about individual effort with G-d
VII.          Gender
A.             Gender Gap- men are moving to the Republican party
1.             Gun control, abortion, gay rights, and social programs- the Democratic party has become very liberal on these issues, which made many Democratic men become Republican
2.             Women like these programs, because they are more sensitive to these issues
VIII.         Schooling and race (read on your own)
Ideology
IX.            Political ideologies
A.             Libertarianism
1.             Believe in small government in all areas- social and economic issues
2.             Liberal on social issues and conservative on economic issues- no government intervention in both areas
3.             Government should only get involved when there is a clear violation of rights
4.             Would give a lot more power to the states
B.             Populists
1.             Opposite of Libertarians
2.             Want strong government intervention both socially and economically (social conservative, economic liberal)
3.             This term is also used to describe people who are looking out for the average American
C.            Liberalism
1.             Liberal on social and economic issues
2.             Want government intervention in the economic arena
a)             Believe in high taxes because the government needs money to fund programs for the poor people
b)             Intervention is needed to create a just society
3.             No government intervention on social issues
D.            Conservatism
1.             Conservative on social and economic issues
2.             Government should intervene in social issues but stay out of economic issues
2/8/12
X.             Why Americans Hate Politics- Libertarianism
A.             Today’s Libertarianism is what the conservative movement was before changes in the 1960s
1.             Goldwater was a conservative who ran for president, but really his conservatism was like today’s Libertarianism.  He was a father of modern Conservatism, but then the party moved more right on social issues, and he was not comfortable with that.  He thought that social issues and religion had no place in politics, and was therefore alienated from the Republican party
B.             Why Libertarians broke away from the Conservative movement in the 60s
1.             The Conservative movement was trying to impose values on people and telling people how to live
2.             Foreign policy- the conservatives were being too hawkish and provoking the USSR into a war.  They did not approve of the Vietnam War- we should not impose a certain type of government onto another country
C.            How did the movement become well known and popular?
1.             Reagan attacked government
a)             Reagan promised to reduce the size of government
b)             Reagan promised to cut the national debt, but it didn’t work out and he ended up spending money on defense and increased the national debt
D.            The government should only have the power to do things that we cannot (like raise an army).  Everything else should be done in the market and private organizations
2/9/12
XI.            Lanahan- Public Opinion
A.             Politicians manipulate public opinion
1.             They twist what the constituents want to make them want what they want
B.             Politicians don’t follow public opinion
1.             When Clinton was impeached, the Republicans pushed it through even though polls showed that the people didn’t want him impeached
C.            Crafted talk- manipulate language to influence people to vote a certain way
XII.           

Monday, January 16, 2012

Yediot Klaliot Translation

Anything that is not translated here is just memorization.  Good luck!!


Yediot Klaliot

Sayings- page 1
1.  Put a fence around Torah
            Refers to mitzvoth de rabanan, which we do to prevent violating mitzvoth from the torah
2.  The world stands on 3 things- torah, davening, and good actions.
            “Avodah” can also mean literal work
3.  Make a rav for yourself and buy a friend.
            A rav is to be a spiritual guide for you.  Why buy a friend?  Because friendships are conditional- you’re friend will not like you if you are evil and awful to them.
4.  Always give everyone the benefit of the doubt
5.  If I am not for myself, then who will be for me?  However, if I am only for myself, than what am I?  And if not now, when?
            You can’t sit around and wait for people to do things on your behalf.  But you also cannot only focus on yourself.  And you should not put anything off- seize the moment.

Rosh Hashannah and Yom Kippur- pages 3-4
1.  After bnay yisroel sinned on chait ha egel, Moshe went up on Har Sinai for 40 days and davened for the Jews and received the new luchot.  Now these are established days of doing teshuvah and HaShem forgives us (from rosh chodesh elul à yom kippur)
2.  A perek from tehilim that we have a minhag of saying from rosh chodesh elul à shmini atzeret.
3.  Our tfilot in which we daven to HaShem for mercy.  Main component- 13 attributes of mercy.  We say these tfilot before shacharit from week before rosh hashanna à yom kippur
4.  The first day of RHS never falls out on Sunday, Wednesday, and Friday.
5.  Prayer we say in front of bait din of 3 men to cancel out vows. 
6.  A perek from tehilim we say 7 times before we blow shofar on RHS
7.  Special foods- apple in honey, head of fish, pomegranite, etc.
8.  1st day of RHS (except if its Shabbat) we go to a body of water with fish and “throw our sins into the sea”
9.  10 days between RHS and YK.
10.  The Shabbat between RHS and YK.  We read a special haftorah.
11.  On erev YK there is a minhag to take a chicken or money for tzedakah and wave it around your head.
12.  The prayer we say right before Kol Nidray in which we forgive everyone who sinned against us.
13.  1st tefilah of YK.  Purpose- cancel vows we’ve taken throughout the year and in the future.
14.  A poem written by ___ which describes the holiness and fearfulness of YK.
15.  Acknowledging your sins verbally.  We say it 10 times.
16.  We read Yonah during mincha of YK.
17.  Last prayer of YK.  Mean locking, and the gates of heaven are being locked.
18.  5 things you cannot do on YK-
19.  Other names for Succot
20.  “4 minim”-
21.  The 21st of tishray, 7th day of Succot.  Real last day for someone to do teshuvah.  We bang the aravot down on this day.
22.  We say the prayer for rain on Shmini Atzeret during musaf and we start saying “Mashiv Ha Ruach.”

Sayings- Page 6
1.  Bad for the wicked, and bad for his neighbor.
2.  Say little and do a lot
3.  Who is wealthy?  He who is happy with what he has.
4.  Who is strong?  One who defeats his yetzer haRah
5.  Don’t look at the vessel, but rather what’s inside of it.
6.  The honor of your friend should be more valuable to you than your own.
7.  Make Torah routine and a part of your life.
8.  Love your friend as yourself.

Korbanot- Page 8
1.   Olah- burn the whole thing.  Given when people go up on the shalosh regalim or if they did not do a mitzvat asey
2.  Chatat- burn a portion and the kohanim eat a portion.  Brought if you sin by accident for a sin that would give you karet
3.  Asham- burn a portion and a portion the kohanim eat.  Brought at the end of a person’s nazirut and when someone’s tzara’at ends
4.  Shlamim- Hashem, the kohanim, and the person who brings it get a portion.  Bring it whenever you feel happy and want to bring a voluntary korban.

Korban tamid- korban brought every day at the times of shacharit and mincha

Sayings- Page 10
1.  People should run to do a mitzvah
2.  Jews are all responsible for each other’s actions
3.  One mitzvah drags along another mitzvah
4.  One sin drags along another sin
5.  If a mitzvah comes to your hands don’t let it slip away
6.  You can go up in holiness, but you cannot go down
7.  A mitzvah that occurs regularly has precedence over an uncommon mitzvah

Page 11
1.  613 mitzvoth in the torah.  248 positive commandments and 365 negative commandments
2.  Positive time bound mitzvoth- only become a mitzvoth at a certain time

Laws of Food- Pages 11-12
1.  Animal- split hooves and chews cud
2.  Fish- fins and scales
3.  Birds- no symbols, rather we eat birds that we know are kosher through oral tradition.  Most non-kosher birds are listed in the torah
4.  Nevayla- kosher animal killed without schitah.  Cannot be eaten
5.  Trayfa- an animal that did get schitah but they found a wound when they checked it that could’ve caused it to die.  You cannot eat it.
6.  A kosher, scheted animal has to also be salted to remove blood and fats, and then rinse.
7.  Mitzvah to separate a piece of dough from a large batch of dough if it is made from the 5 grains.  Today, we burn the piece of dough.  Must be 3lb 11 oz.
9.  Any vessel that you purchase that was manufactured by a non-Jew must be rinsed in a mikvah
10.  A meal that you have to give honor to the fulfillment of a mitzvah.
11.  Say 100 brachot a day
12.  Take a corner of field and leave it for poor people to harvest for themselves
13.  First fruits of the 7 minim brought to the BHM to thank HaShem for all the goodness he provides us.
14.  7 year agricultural cycle, where the 7th year we are not allowed to work the land.  Any fruits or veggies that grow anyone can eat.
15.  After 7 cycles, the 50th year you cannot work the land, free all the slaves, and any land sold returns to the original owner.

Sayings- Page 14
1.  From your suffering you will benefit
2.  It’s not the learning that’s important, rather the actions
3.  Stay away from lies
4.  Tshuvah, davening, and charity remove a bad decree
5.  Guard what comes out of your mouth carefully

Tefilah- Page 15
Shomah Esreh has 3 sections (lists brachot of each section)
1.  It is preferable to daven with a lot of people because that is the best way to honor the King
2.  Bracha we say to thank HaShem after-
1. Someone who is sick gets better, 2.  Someone gets freed from prison, 3.  Someone travels safely through the desert, 4.  Someone who arrived safely from travelling overseas.
3.  Prayer we say on Shabbat before rosh chodesh to announce the new month
4.  Every holiday we say a special prayer to elevate the neshama of those who died
5.  People who prayed at sunrise- best time to daven
6.  Blessing the Kohanim- done every day in Israel but only sometimes not in Israel.
7.  Prayers said Friday night to welcome Shabbat
8.  Tehilim about destruction of BHMK and galut
9.  When the chazzan repeats Shmoneh Esreh
10.  The blessings of shacharit before psukey dzimra
11.  The blessings of praise to Hashem from Baruch Sheamar and Yishtabach
12.  Blessing we say at the beginning of the month after Shabbat when we start to see the moon
13.  Blessing we say when we go on a journey
14.  When they raise and roll the Torah after Torah reading
15.  The blessing they say when someone comes up for an aliyah during Torah reading
16.  
17.  Kadish of an orphan- said to remember a person's deceased parent for 11 months after the parent dies
       Full/ Partial Kadish- said by the chazan 
       Kadish of the Rabbis- said when someone finishes learning a portion of Torah (Siyum)
18.  A blessing said in vain
19.  Another name for Al Hamichya


Friday, January 13, 2012

AP US Gov Midterm Review

Poli sci midrerm


Constitution, congress, presidency, courts, bureaucracy, federalism


How did the founders view man?
Cynical view- man is selfish, but they still wanted man to be free
Let people fight economically and the government will be an umpire to control it and bring order
Divide power bc man is corrupt
First true republic- not based on g-d
Founders knew they couldnt change nature of man


First government was a confederation but it dint work bc the national givernment was too weak (reasons). Needed a stronger national government
New constitution created a federal system with a stronger national governent. People panicked that it would become like england so the federalists wrote the federalist papers to convicnce ppl to ratify the constitution
Shays rebellion


Federalist 10 madison
Factions (today interest groups)
Worried a faction would dominate the government and suppress everyone else
Cant get rid of factions bc it gets rid of liberty and freedom
Biggest contributor to factions is unequal distribution of property
Control interest groups (bc cant eliminate them)
      Big country with diverse interests will create so many factions so no one faction can dominate
Assured ppl that the government will control factions. A small direct democracy could not prevent factions, only a large republic


Federalist 51 madison
Addition to federalist 10
Separation of powers and fedeeralism
Even if there is a faction, sop and federalism will makeit hard for factions to dominate (would need to take over 3 branches and the state governments to control)
Legislative needs to be divided in 2 bc its meant to be the strongest branch


Compromises at constitutional conventiom
Great compromise created bicameral legislature
3/5 compromise said that every five slaves counts as three people for the purposes of representation and taxation
Commerce and slave trade compromise- national government cannot tax exports and it cannot limit the slave trade for 20 years


Judicial review made the judicial branch a coequal branch (part of the unwritten constitution, but it was part of the founders intent to have it)


Congress
What determines how members vote?
      Representational/delegate- follow what people back home want mostly on issues where the people have strong views and opinions
      Trustee- go by their own opinions and views bc the congressmen know better (legislation today is very complicated)
      Organizational- vote based on what your party leadership wants (so they will put you on a committee)


How does a bill become a law? (chart)
House- centralized
     Rules committee sets time limits for debate and decides ifamendments can be added
      Leadership call the shots
Senate- decentralized
     No rules committee
     Filibuster- talk a bill do death.  Done to cool down the house which is the role of the senate. End a filibuster with cloture (3/5 of senate votes to end)
     Control the peoples passions
Once a bill gets out of both houses it goes to a conference committee to reconcile differences them it goes back to the houses to vote on the changes and then it goes to the president
President can sign, veto, pocket veto (if session ends in less than ten days and president doesnt sign it is vetoed), and if he doesnt sign in ten days it automatically becomes law
Line item veto- president could not follow certain parts of a bill to cut spendings, but supreme court outruled it


Diff types of committees


Gerrymandering- draw congressional districts to benefit a political party. Done when they redistrict after a census every 10 years. It is legal and there are rules (lines must be continuous, no malapportionament), except for racial gerrymandering which is illegal


Unique powers of senate
Ratifies treaties (2/3 vote)
Confirms presedential appointments
Remove impeached officials (2/3 vote)


House
All bills that deal with revenue and taxation have to start in the house in the ways and means committee


Know different powers


Presidency


Electoral college- voters are disenfranchised bc of winner take all, faithless electors, elections can be thrown to the house


Real sources of power for the president are politics and public opinion (informal powers)
Powers of the president (from the constitution)
     Commander in chief
     Chief diplomat- recieves ambassadors and negotiates treaties
     Signs what congress passes
     Appoints federal judges
     Give a state of the union
     Chief executive- enforces the laws by the take care clause