Life in Suburbia
After World War II the concept of life in America began a new. The process of suburbanization began in cities all across the nation. Today the cities of yesteryear are gone and life as we knew it ended. However, people do not want it to end. They still want the American Dream; the house in the suburbs, the good job, the wife, car and 2.4 kids playing in the yard. These people have been the driving force in the division of socioeconomic status, and the division of race in the suburbs. They accomplish this through local governments and the decisions made through them. Though what has been created, by all of this over the years, isn't necessarily bad, but it has hurt the country in ways that we did not expect. When soldiers returned from the war they were greeted with open arms and a new booming economy. It was this booming economy, of service-oriented jobs, that allowed the middle class of people the opportunity to move away from their jobs and separate their work from their home. Also during that time we were still, as a country, practicing racial segregation, which is part of the reason for the racial inequalities in the suburbs today. These new
Therefore they banded together as neighborhoods and communities to make the decisions that affected that area on a daily basis. This is where the socioeconomic division began. There is no real way to rectify the situation at this time, so all we can do is wait for another economic change to help lift the poor. The wealthy will always find a way to stay ahead as long as they can. The suburbs have always been a place of retreat for the wealthy, they will always be, and there is nothing we can do to change that. They did this by building extravagant houses and spending their money on their schools. Life in the suburbs was good until we started to notice the decline in the life lead by the inner-city folk. They lived around the people of the same socioeconomic status and were separated from their work. Capitalism is based on the fact that there will always be a caste system. The suburban councils/governments had created laws and other things that had reduced the amount of space that would be allowed for the renewal of the lower class and poor. The benefit of this was that now they had almost total autonomy from the poor and the lower class they so quickly left behind in the city. The first thing that some areas did was to raise the housing prices of the area to the point that nobody else could afford to move in. Also since most people worked in the city, they wanted to continue with the dream of keeping home and work separate. The original settlers of the suburbs had done two things to keep their wonderful life-styles. We as the good, moral country that we are, decided we needed to do something about them.
Common topics in this essay:
American Dream,
War II,
lower class,
socioeconomic status,
laws restrict,
american dream,
necessarily bad,
booming economy,
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