Asked by idk

Through television advertising, what message did Lyndon B. Johnson communicate about his opponent, Barry Goldwater, during the presidential election of 1964?
Question 19 options:

That he was too dangerous to be president

That he was too corrupt to be president

That he was too weak on communism to be president

That he was too much against civil rights to be president

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
That he was too dangerous to be president

(LBJ's famous TV ads—most notably the "Daisy" spot—portrayed Goldwater as reckless and likely to lead the country into catastrophe, including nuclear war.)