Racial Inequality In America

Words: 1569
Pages: 7

Idealized as a land of opportunities, where everyone is given the chance to prosper and achieve that perfect home and family, the American dream has skewed far from that. The concept of the American dream originated in 1931, when historian Truslow Adams was referring to “that dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for every man, with opportunity for each according to his ability or achievement”. Over Americas historical sequence, circumstances have risen that prevent such dream to become a reality. The American dream is on a decline because of inequality, changes in the structure of families, and average debts present in the United States.
Racial inequality has deprived a substantial amount of people the ability to work and provide for one’s family. Racism has evidently been a reoccurring theme throughout America’s eras, and has come to a point where it has laid out a platform for racial bias. “The reality is, based on Labor Department statistics, people of color are nearly twice as likely to be out of work as Caucasian Americans, even when they have the same degree” (Rassuli). When looking at two educationally
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Structure of families has ideally been the focal point of the American dream, but recent movements in women’s independence, such structure has been given a new definition. “About 29 percent of America's business owners are women, that’s up from 26 percent in 1997. The number of women-owned firms has grown 68 percent since 2007, compared with 47 percent for all businesses” (White). In a “typical” American family, the man would go off to work, and the woman would stay home with the kids, but this is not really the case anymore. Women, through many means, are being more self-reliant, eliminating the need for a dependence of any sort. Self-reliance, though, is not the only recorded evidence of the decline of the American