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View Full Version : Black Segregation drops to lowest in century



IronEastBloc
14th December 2010, 14:58
Alot of bad news today...if you're a racist scumbag douche who belongs living amongst the neanderthal:

http://atlantapost.com/2010/12/14/black-segregation-drops-to-lowest-in-century/


(WASHINGTON) — America's neighborhoods became more integrated last year than during any time in at least a century as a rising black middle class moved into fast-growing white areas in the South and West.

Still, ethnic segregation in many parts of the U.S. persisted, particularly for Hispanics. (See the top 10 U.S. stories of 2010.)

Segregation among blacks and whites fell in roughly three-quarters of the nation's 100 largest metropolitan areas as the two racial groups spread more evenly between inner cities and suburbs, according to recent census data.

The findings are expected to be reinforced with fresh census data being released Tuesday on race, migration and economics. The new information is among the Census Bureau's most detailed releases yet for neighborhoods.

"It's taken a Civil Rights movement and several generations to yield noticeable segregation declines for blacks," said William H. Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution who reviewed the census data. "But the still-high levels of black segregation in some areas, coupled with uneven clustering patterns for Hispanics, suggest that the idea of a post-racial America has a way to go."

The race trends also hint at the upcoming political and legal wrangling over the 2010 census figures, to be published in the spring. The data will be used to reallocate congressional districts, drawing new political boundaries. New Hispanic-dominated districts could emerge, particularly for elected positions at the state and local level. States are required under the Voting Rights Act to respect the interests of minority voting blocs, which tend to support Democratic candidates.

Milwaukee, Detroit and Syracuse, N.Y., were among the most segregated, all part of areas in the Northeast and Midwest known by some demographers as the "ghetto belt." On the other end of the scale, cities that were least likely to be segregated included Fort Myers, Fla., Honolulu, Atlanta and Miami.

Hispanic integration was mixed. There was less Hispanic-white segregation in cities and suburbs in many large metros such as Buffalo, Washington, D.C., and Chicago, according to preliminary census figures. But in many smaller neighborhoods, large numbers of more recently arrived Hispanic immigrants are believed to be clustering together for social support, experts said.

The findings on segregation are partly based on a demographic index that tracks the degree to which racial groups are evenly spread between city and suburb. The index ranges from 0 to 100, with 60 or above generally considered highly segregated. That index found that for large U.S. metros in 2009, the black-white segregation reading was 27, down from 33 in 2000 and the lowest in generations.

Still, the recent gains in racial integration are somewhat limited, said John Logan, a sociologist at Brown University who has studied residential segregation. He noted that black-white segregation remained generally high in areas of the Northeast and Midwest. In those areas, there is slow population growth and white flight from increasingly minority neighborhoods is still common.

As for Hispanics and Asians, while residential movement out of ethnic neighborhoods has been increasing, those numbers have generally been surpassed by the arrival of new immigrants into traditional enclaves.

"The political implications of these trends are great in the long run — majority black districts will become harder to sustain, while more majority Hispanic districts will emerge, especially for state and local positions," Logan said.

The figures come from previous censuses and the 2009 American Community Survey, which samples 3 million households.

Due to incomplete 2009 data, the analysis of racial segregation omits seven metro areas: Sarasota, Fla., Greenville, S.C., Harrisburg, Pa., Jackson, Miss., McAllen, Texas, Portland, Maine, and Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

IronEastBloc
14th December 2010, 15:03
What also makes this so incredible is how undiverse ethnic-wise Poland is, which shows that Eastern Europe isn't just a bastion of racism and ignorance like the mainstream media portrays.

RedSonRising
16th December 2010, 12:12
Is it really because of a rising black middle class? That's odd, I would think it was because of a polarizing white middle class having to move into less expensive areas along with the gentrification of black urban neighborhoods causing dispersion.

IronEastBloc
17th December 2010, 00:27
Is it really because of a rising black middle class? That's odd, I would think it was because of a polarizing white middle class having to move into less expensive areas along with the gentrification of black urban neighborhoods causing dispersion.

I honestly think it's because the white proletariat is starting to see how division from the black proletariat only is a game to keep unity from forming, thus creating a larger chance to bring down capitalism...at least, that's the Leninist view of it

Pravda Soyuz
17th December 2010, 00:47
this is a small victory for socialism, the more unified the proletariat is, the more effective the movement is as a whole!

Catma
17th December 2010, 00:56
I honestly think it's because the white proletariat is starting to see how division from the black proletariat only is a game to keep unity from forming, thus creating a larger chance to bring down capitalism...at least, that's the Leninist view of it

Well that's certainly optimistic...

It's interesting that they chose to say "rising black middle class" instead of "falling white middle class". The former reinforces images of uppity black folk getting more and more, while the latter (which I think is a more accurate and natural description) almost inescapably points out the nature of the escalating class war in the country. I wonder why the newspaper chose to phrase it one way and not the other... :glare:

Ocean Seal
17th December 2010, 01:20
Its certainly a positive thing, but from what I see the state of segregation hasn't changed all that much in suburban New York (the most rampant in the entire United States). I hope that this changes segregation and institutionalized racism is really bad in the United States and I would say in the Northeast more so than anywhere else.

Casbah
17th December 2010, 20:30
Its certainly a positive thing, but from what I see the state of segregation hasn't changed all that much in suburban New York (the most rampant in the entire United States). I hope that this changes segregation and institutionalized racism is really bad in the United States and I would say in the Northeast more so than anywhere else.

I'd say that where I live, in Texas it's worse. The rhetoric is unbelievable and the legislation being proposed is total class warfare. I live in Dallas and just to the north in a little city called Farmers Branch they're bulldozing all the low income housing and building up expensive condos. They've effectively turned landowners and business men into immigration cops. I recently moved back to Dallas after two years, I'm not sure what the status is on this but before I left they were trying to make english the official language of the city. Pathetic.:(