The American Dream in the 1940s
The American Dream was not accessible to everyone who lived during the 1940s in America because not everyone had the same lifestyle. In one of the lines, Pachuco said, “We hear a siren, then another, and another. It sounds like gangbusters.” In other words, this supporting quote means that there were a lot of police officers or other people who took part in breaking up criminal gangs.
How did the American Dream look like, there were different laws, subject to different races? The Los Angeles city council also banned the wearing of the zoot suits, in the end the LAPD arrested significantly more Mexican Americans, nearly 600. Why was the zoot suit banned because their excessive fabric was seen as unpatriotic, the suits were mainly worn by Hispanics in the Los Angeles area and led to several fights between the Hispanic and the Whites. One of my supporting quotes is “We hear a siren, then another, and another”. It sounds like a gangbuster. The dance is interrupted by the snare. COUPLES pause on the dance floor.” …show more content…
It had a positive effect on ethnic consciousness among Americans of Mexican descent, and also for the recognition of separate Mexican American identity. What this means to me is that not everyone had a positive effect on the riots. Why is this because not everyone wears a zoot suit? The only people to wear zoot suits were young African American and Mexican youth with a sense of individualistic identity within their culture and