In 1932 over 43,000 protestors marched on Washington DC, demanding better treatment and pay for veterans of World War I. President Hoover and the US government responded with violence, tear gassing and shooting the veterans.
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In 1932 over 43,000 protestors marched on Washington DC, demanding better treatment and pay for veterans of World War I. President Hoover and the US government responded with violence, tear gassing and shooting the veterans.
Honda and Toyota survived trade wars, import quotas and xenophobia in the 1960s through the 1980s to become an economic juggernaut that reshaped the American auto industry. Sources The Keiretsu Advantage by Jasper Boers from the Yale Economic History Journal The New, Improved Keiretsu by Katsuki Aoki and Thomas Taro Lennerfors Lessons from the US-Japan Trade War of the 1980s from NPR's All Things Considered The Import Quota that Rebuild the Auto Industry by Wells King and Dan Vaug...
Shaking America
In 1932 over 43,000 protestors marched on Washington DC, demanding better treatment and pay for veterans of World War I. President Hoover and the US government responded with violence, tear gassing and shooting the veterans.