• @UsernameHere
    link
    99 months ago

    My great grandfather came to America from Ireland and supported a family of 9 with a single income

    • @BakerBagel@midwest.social
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      fedilink
      -59 months ago

      And there were successful blackmen in the US from 1820- segregation. American history is full of social classes based on race and ethnicity with white protestant men on top. Irish, Italian, and Polish Catholics faced less discrimination than their black counter parts, but they still faced red lining, discrimination in jobs and getting loans and had a massive economic disadvantage. Obviously they managed to raise families, otherwise we wouldn’t have those ethnic groups in America today.

      America has always been built in inequality, its just that the WASP middle class used to have have an underclass to feel like they were better than. Now there isn’t even a middle class because the wealthy have taken everything.

      • @UsernameHere
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        29 months ago

        So your original statement is wrong:

        To be clear, this was for white (Irish and Italians don’t count) men, and many black, hispanic, and native families could not afford to live the American dream.

        Because my Irish great grandfather very much lived the American dream. That is because this statement you made is also wrong:

        America has always been built in inequality

        The richest Americans had a tax rate of 91% in the 1960s. That number has plummeted since and income inequality has gotten to where it is today as a result.

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