No they didn't wajajajajaja!! wajajajajaja!
it was hard for black people
In the 1930s, mentally disabled people faced significant stigma and were often institutionalized in large, overcrowded facilities. They were frequently subjected to neglect, abuse, and inhumane treatment. Many did not have access to appropriate medical care or support services.
In the 1930s, people with intellectual disabilities were often institutionalized in large, overcrowded facilities where they faced neglect, abuse, and inadequate care. Eugenics movements also influenced attitudes towards individuals with disabilities, leading to sterilization and discrimination. Overall, they were marginalized and segregated from society, with limited opportunities for education and employment.
It can depend on the flowers you are planting.
People in the 1930s traveled mostly by hover cars and acconsionly by rocket ships..
It was very hard at times but people still got through.
yes... people drove wagons in the 1930s.. but there were cars there too.. but it was very expensive.
people hit people
The dust bowl drought of the 1930s was a natural disaster which resulted in some three million people walking off their farms in the Great Plains. The ploughing of the natural vegetation of the grasslands, and the planting of wheat which could not survive the drought, resulted in the exposure of tonnes of bare earth, which in turn gave rise to continuous dust storms.
big people
old
nipples