Homeless, a way to describe more than two million American’s during the Great Depression. They ended up building little, one room shacks in near proximity of each other called Hoovervilles. In one Hooverville, 29% of the people were not white. There were 120 Filipinos, 29 African Americans, 25 Mexicans, 4 Native Americans, 4 South Americans, and 2 Japanese. Women and children were not allowed to live here because of sanitation rules. The treatment and lives of women, people of color, the elderly, and the intellectually disabled has gotten better since the Great Depression because the unemployment rate of blacks has greatly decreased, women have jobs and social lives, and there are homes and places that care for the elderly and intellectually …show more content…
Blacks entered the Great Depression before the stock market crash and were in it longer than other Americans, and a majority of them were unemployed; they were the “last hired and the first fired” during this time. Today, they have just as equal employment opportunities as a white person. Blacks can apply for the same jobs, interview, and cannot be rejected for their race. The only reason a black person should ever legally be fired is because they are lacking skill in the job area. The employment opportunities have increased, resulting in lower unemployment rates. Black urban unemployment reached well over 50 percent during the Great Depression. Black people now have better educations and ways of living. Accordingly, their current unemployment rate is around 8.4 percent. We know that more of them have jobs and better education, but how other people treat them has changed tremendously. The book Of Mice and Men shows how black people were treated within that time period. Crooks slept in the barn, wasn’t welcome to hang out with any of the other men, and heard many cruel words from Curley’s wife. Nothing of this sort would happen now a day. President Obama, a black man, has slept in the white house. If you look at any college or professional sports team, you can see that races intermingle all the time. Hate groups targeting black people have decreased greatly, and law enforcement will be there to defend the blacks. The treatment of blacks has positively changed since the Great Depression and is still becoming