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African American Middle Class

Decent Essays

here's another option: African Americans were the last to benefit from positive developments that formed the broad American middle class, and they were the first impacted by the negative developments that are destroying it.
The reality is that historic, legal efforts long restricted the economic lives of minorities. Restricted the kind of work they could do. Restricted their membership in unions. Restricted their access to education and training. Restricted their opportunity in the private sector world of product sales and client services. Restrictions which most white Americans, if they are even aware of them, do not seem to understand the extent of, the persistence of, or the long-standing consequences of -- at all. And, of course, the economic …show more content…

That department, tucked away in the window-less bowels of the hospital, physically organized in a way in which the only direct contact its members had with the larger (almost entirely white) hospital staff was through a small window where doctors presented their records request, employed about 25 full time workers; all women, all but three (of which I was one) African American. It was the only time in my long work history (I made a career in advertising) in which I worked in a situation in which minorities were the majority, and the only time I worked under the supervision of an African American department head. (In fact, in a long career in business, in the nation's most liberal cities, it was one of only a very few times I worked with African Americans at all.) These (public sector) jobs provided my African American co-workers and supervisors' families -- almost all were married -- with stability that their husbands' less dependable and riskier work, in African American unions and their own small neighborhood businesses, couldn't on their own. In this, and in their hopes for their children, their respect for education, their desire for advancement, their professionalism and commitment they were absolutely no different than the white women I worked with over the next few decades, as work became less stable for white men too, and two incomes became a necessity for anything approaching the middle class in the white community. (Actually, they took their work much more seriously, and approached it with more professionalism, because unlike many working and middle class white women of my own generation, they didn't expect that a day would come when they could stay home with the kids and live off one, their husbands',

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