Posted on 09/22/2010 10:49:18 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
America is known as the Great Melting Pot.
But a closer look at census data shows we're a lot closer to a dinner plate with the peas here, carrots here, potatoes here, and steak over there. In other words, a very high level of racial segregation.
This cool series of maps was produced by Eric Fischer, based on a map of Chicago from Bill Rankin's Radical Cartography.
Red represents white people, blue is black, green is Asian, and orange is Hispanic, and each dot is 25 people.
(Excerpt) Read more at businessinsider.com ...
Where’s the raw data? I’d like to correlate voting precinct results with race, income, and population density to compare with Travis’ CWII Cube theory.
Here’s the original set of images. It has many, many cities...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/walkingsf/sets/72157624812674967/with/5014028194/
Here’s the original set of images. It has many, many cities...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/walkingsf/sets/72157624812674967/with/5014028194/
Fantastic, thanks for the site.
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Check Out The Extreme Racial Segregation In America’s Biggest Cities
“
Sometime when I lived in Los Angeles during 1995-2005, The Los Angeles
Times ran a first-page article about how Milwaukee was about the
most segregated city in the USA.
You could almost read the smugness that Los Angeles was proud there
was a place more segregated than LA with all the gated communities and
concentration of Hispanics in East LA.
It seemed to be a case of liberal “holier-than-thou” by LA.
Map reminds me of St. Louis.
Whitey mostly moves to a semicircle west of the Mississippi River,
leaving the urban disaster in a semi-circle closer in.
And an urban corporate and Gateway Arch area adjacent to the river.
While that may be true, it's not the complete story in cities. People would like to keep their lives and property and raise their children in a civilized environment.
Yes, the Springs is about 6% black, but I’m not sure about the 80% white number, because the Hispanic population is quite high here.
And I don’t care how the city looks. If people choose to segregate themselves, that’s their choice. I just think that it’s telling that the “liberal utopias” in the state like Denver and Boulder who scream endlessly about diversity and equality are the worst offenders for segregation.
In the meantime, in the “Evil Conservative” city of Colorado Springs, we have people of all colors and races working together with very, very little racially motivated crime, and with neighborhoods where different races live side-by-side with no strife.
Heck, just on my block, we have half a dozen Hispanic families, two black families, and about nine white families. All our kids play in the yards, often with each other.
What I’m sick of is the constant prejudice and presumptions about conservatives as “racists.” My post was simply to point out that conservatives are not the ones creating segregated cities.
I lived in Milwaukee, one of the nation’s “Hyper-Segregated” cities, and one of the few cities that actually elected full socialists instead of Democrats, and a city that went about 80 years under left-wing control. That city is a cesspool of racial intolerance. Yet the worst of the downtrodden continued to reelect those who were responsible for destroying the city and its economy.
The difference is glaring. That’s all I was trying to point out. I have no “white guilt”. I leave that to liberals who define themselves by their skin color, and not the content of their character.
the 80% I looked up on a city demographics site
race perspective is shaped by two things I’ve learned:
your own race
how many of the “others” are around you
hence in Dixie we are always scorned for not being diversity tolerant yet we are the most diverse (that really means non white) part of the nation
i lived in Manhattan 1980-88...most segregated place I ever lived
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