Johnson's Doors of Opportunity

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Former President Lyndon B. Johnson once said, “We must open the doors of opportunity. But we must also equip our people to walk through those doors.” And, with that idea in mind, Johnson waged a war against poverty in the United States of America. This so-called War on Poverty, which a mere portion of his greater movement of social reforms known as the Great Society, was a perpetual war upon suffering. And that suffering was, according to Michael Harrington in his book The Other America, practically invisible to the American people. Johnson, who was against the welfare state, made it clear that he didn’t want to give handouts, and he didn’t want to redistribute income (Davies). Johnson wanted only to offer opportunity to a deserving poor (Levinson). And he succeeded, relatively. Johnson’s War on Poverty successfully reduced poverty rates in the United States and, more significantly, improved the standard of living for millions of Americans.

To wage his war, Johnson’s first priority was to stimulate the economy, and he accomplished this by having the Tax Reduction Act passed. Over 1964 and 1965 this legislature provided over ten billion dollars in relief which subsequently expanded the economy on a massive scale (Germany). Johnson’s second priority was to establish a task force that would organize and commit to the actual battle against poverty. From this came the Economic Opportunity Act (“Economic Opportunity Act of 1964”).

The Economic Opportunity Act (EOA) was vital to Johnson’s battle against poverty (Germany). Through and under the control of the Office of Economic Opportunity, the Economic Opportunity Act formed a large assortment of social programs set to tackle the problem of poverty. JobCorps was created to offer work,...

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