Throughout history, it is well known that America aims for equality for all people. People tend to think that everyone in our country is treated equally, but they ignore the fact that the actions of the poor are despised by the higher classes and power. Henry Miller, an American writer who criticizes society, says, "We have always two American flags, Miller was forced to adhere to in order to imply social imprisonment and to keep the American poor from being considered social untouchable.
An obvious example of inequality in the United States is the plight of a woman imprisoned. Blocked women are fundamentally invisible in the mainstream feminist discourse, and black women are seeking awareness in mainstream feminism and are the most growing group in recent years. Women being captured are women who are unbalanced in color and poverty. Reproductive struggle for justice and freedom extends to the era of colored people. Women who give birth during imprisonment are frequently handcuffed or attached to the ankle during childbirth and often subjected to forced disinfection. Between 2006 and 2010, at least 39 women were sterilized without explicit consent and dozens of women were forced or forced to agree to this procedure. Sterilization of women in prisons was illegal only in September 2014 without consent.
Inequality remains a major obstacle to achieving social human development. Gender inequality is the greatest obstacle to all inequality. Due to the social role of women or men, women are discriminated against and discriminated against in the workplace from the perspective of access to health, education and political representation. Gender disparities in the world are still large, and the gender inequality index is still affecting human development. The United States ranked 45th in the world ranking in 2016, the inequality was 0.722, and the human development index was 0.920. India is 87th, inequality is 0.683, and human development index is 0.624 (World Economic Forum)