Mounting Racial Tensions 'Resegregating' America, Activists Say

QueEx

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<font size="5"><center>Mounting Racial Tensions 'Resegregating'
America, Activists Say</font size></center>


Black Press USA
by Hazel Trice Edney
NNPA Editor-in-Chief

WASHINGTON (NNPA) – More than 100 years since W.E.B. DuBois declared that the “color line” would be the key problem of the 20th Century, civil rights activists and race experts now say the problem of racial tensions are still so pervasive in the 21st Century that some have labeled it as a resegregation.

“It’s undeniable that we are resegregating education in a dramatic way and we are also resegregating or becoming more segregated residentially than we were. And so those things are clearly going backward,” says Mark Potok, director of the Intelligence Project of the Alabama-based Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors racial hate activities across the nation. “I don’t think race-relations are doing terrifically well.”

Potok says what appears to be a rise in racially charged incidents publicized this year alone coincides with the rise in race hate groups nationwide.

• In January, the story was still blaring about comedian Michael Richard’s calling a Black man the N-Word from the stage in a crowded Los Angeles comedy club in November.

• Within a few months, now former talk show host Don Imus’ on-air “nappy-headed hos” insult to the Rutgers University women’s basketball team dominated the airwaves and the streets.

• Meanwhile, a list of racially charged criminal justice cases began heavily circulating. They include:

• The Nov. 25 wedding day killing of unarmed Black man Sean Bell by New York police officers, which sparked protests into the new year;

• The case of Genarlow Wilson, 21, who is serving 10 years in a Georgia prison as he awaits the state Supreme Court’s decision on his conviction of consensual oral sex with a 15-year-old White girl that happened when he was 17;

• The U. S. Supreme Court’s ruling against race-conscious public school assignments in Louisville, Ken. and Seattle, Wash. that sent a chilling affect over other such plans across the nation;

• And the Jena Six case, now at full throttle in Louisiana, where 16-year-old Mychal Bell and five other Black high school students could face up to a combined 100 years in prison after a school brawl that started with them being insulted by nooses hung in a so-called “White Tree.”​

Coinciding with consistent news reports on such cases, Potok says the heated immigration debate that railed in the U. S. Senate well into the spring apparently exacerbated negative reaction to the racial climate. He says the perception of the rising number of Black and Brown people in America is directly connected to the rise in hate groups.

According to the Intelligence Report, 602 such groups, including the Ku Klux Klan and the Aryan Nations, were documented throughout the U. S. in 2000. That number has now risen by 40 percent to 844 in six years, he says, calling it “quite a significant rise and a real one.”

Potok describes, “The reaction of very many people is that, ‘My country is changing all around me. This is not the country that my forefathers built. It must be because those brown-skinned people are coming in and destroying it.”

Actual hate crimes and attacks soon follow, he says:

“When hate crime gets the worst, it’s when the neighborhood starts to approach sort of a tipping point like 49 percent. But, once you get a significant number of whatever it is, Black people in a White neighborhood, brown people or whatever it is at the 30 or 40 percent mark, then some people start to feel ‘My town’s been stolen from me by these interlopers.’”

Some places, such as Jena, where Mychal Bell was convicted by an all White jury in a case with a White judge and a White prosecutor, just appear to be a fluke, Potok says. “The civil rights movement just never made it there.”

But, as the cases and the atmosphere of racism mount, activists say Black people can fight back non-violently – and win.

Activist, the Rev. Al Sharpton, who has organized community marches in response to all of the most high-profiled criminal justice cases, says community mobilization is still among the most effective responses to racism and injustice.

“Unquestionably, the color line was not solved in the 20th Century and it is absolutely facing us in the 21st Century. The difference is there has been in the last decade those who are in our own community who have been tricked into going to sleep and thinking that the relative progress of a few individuals has changed the plight of the masses,” he says. “Therefore, it has emboldened racists to come back out of the closet.”

Sharpton says that those who criticize marching and having rallies in response to injustices are shirking what has proven to work.

“The civil rights movement worked. They changed the laws that we are fighting to keep…How did they fight them? They fought one battle at a time. They fought Birmingham and then Selma. And those battles have broad ramifications…So, as we fight these battles, we must fight single battles that have broad ramifications. For example, we fought one battle of Imus and the whole industry now, including the record industry, is changing the N-Word and all,” he says.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson agrees.
“The laws changed, but the culture keeps kicking back,” Jackson says. “We will keep struggling, that’s what we are going to do.”

Jackson says the period resurgence of overt racism in America is associated with the fact that an “undercurrent of fear” does not realize the benefits of diversity.

“When the color line is dropped you have more talent developed…I think that we are making progress, but we are swimming uphill. We are running, but we are swimming uphill,” he says. “There is a layer of change that’s significant and there’s an undercurrent of resistance that’s surreal. The undercurrent will take you down.”

Dr. Julia Hare
While Jackson and Sharpton often focus on community marches, Dr. Julia Hare, national executive director of the San Francisco-based Black Think Tank, says mobilized Blacks could take other direct action.

“To maintain any kind of supremacy, you’ve got to maintain some kind of inferiority,” says Hare, a psychologist. “The people who put you under this oppression, why should they free you?”

Hare says Black people must free themselves by taking direct action beyond marching such as collectively boycotting and removing their money from banks that redline in Black communities and by refusing to deal with stores and businesses that disrespect or fail to hire significant numbers of Black people.

She says Black churches, under the inspiration of conscious Black preachers, could play a major role in organizing such targeted protests.

Hare says the same strategies could be used to mobilize Black people to “take over school boards” and establish disciplinary and academic policies that could spark progress for Black children.

Even as the perceived enemy is racism and White supremacy, another major problem in dismantling racist policies or in changing the racial climate in America can actually come from within the Black community, says Sharpton. He says high profile Blacks who try to marginalize racism in America or downplay it is doing the community a disservice.

“When they talk down race, they give a lot of White America a cover into operating in the dark where they can do what they want and it’s no longer front page and front burner,” Sharpton says. “Everybody should be saying what is obvious – that there is a spike in racism from decisions by the Supreme Court all they way down to a Don Imus... And anyone who is saying we are beyond race is deluding the public for their own edification.”

http://www.blackpressusa.com/News/Article.asp?SID=3&Title=Hot+Stories&NewsID=13963
 
QueEx said:
“When hate crime gets the worst, it’s when the neighborhood starts to approach sort of a tipping point like 49 percent. But, once you get a significant number of whatever it is, Black people in a White neighborhood, brown people or whatever it is at the 30 or 40 percent mark, then some people start to feel ‘My town’s been stolen from me by these interlopers.’”
This is exactly what I see going on here in Brooklyn. The white people snuck in a few at a time. When they were a small minority they were quiet and "nice". Now they are right around that 49% mark so now they feel it is theirs and are trying to get us out by any means necessary. The racial tension is at an all time high. We don't want to go anywhere and refuse to let them steal our neighborhoods without a real good fight. The whites feel we are "bringing down their property values" and just don't want to have to interact with us or see us. Very fucked up.
 
<font size="5"><center>Blacks and Latinos Majority in Many U.S. Counties</font size><font size="4">
Figures Show Diversity Spreading to Suburbs and Beyond
Whites are the minority in almost one in 10 U.S. counties</font size></center>

blacks_and.jpg

In nearly one of every 10 U.S.
counties, 303 of 3,141, more
than half the residents are
ethnic minorities, according to
a new report from the Census
Bureau.

BlackVoicesNews
Wednesday, 15 August 2007
INLAND EMPIRE
By Chris Levister

One need only stroll down East Highland Avenue in San Bernardino, jockey for parking at Wal-Mart in Fontana, visit a public school in Moreno Valley, pull up to a fast food drive thru in Rialto or visit the campus of UC Riverside to see evidence of the U.S. Census Bureau's latest study.

The country is growing more racially diverse. Nonwhites now make up a majority in almost one-third of the most populous counties in the country and in nearly one in 10 of all 3,141 counties according to Census Bureau figures released Saturday.

"There's some culture shock," said Mark Mather of the Population Reference Bureau, a Washington based research firm. "But I think there's a momentum building, and it is going to continue."

Back in the early 1960s, R&B singer-songwriter Sam Cooke informed us that ‘a change is gonna come'. He was right, ethnically speaking: In counties such as Los Angeles, less than 50 percent of the population identifies itself as white.

Los Angeles, Chicago and New York may remain among the fastest growing centers for Latinos and Blacks, but according to the U.S. Census Bureau, America's minority groups are leaving big inner cities in rapid numbers, settling in rural and suburban communities.

The report is the first population estimate by race and ethnicity since Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast in 2005, scattering hundreds of thousands of people. Experts say southern California is now home to thousands of Blacks displaced by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Other hurricane victims have settled in New York, Florida and Texas.

According to the Census Bureau, Los Angeles County has some 7 million minority residents - 71 percent of its population and one of every 14 minority residents in the nation. That's more people than the total population of Cook County the nation's second biggest county, which includes Chicago.

The numbers also underscore most demographers' view that California's population is pushing east, from both Los Angeles and the Bay Area, to less congested counties such as Riverside and San Bernardino.

In California the minority migration has come about as Los Angeles in recent years has added more jobs that require high levels of skill. Meanwhile, the creation of low skill jobs has continued to dwindle.

Adding to the exodus of Blacks and Latinos is the fast-rising cost of living in Los Angeles, rampant crime and underachieving schools. An acute labor shortage in other parts of the state and nation, is spurring many Blacks and Latinos to seek better opportunities away from California.

The study indicates, during the 1990s and 2000s, many middle and low income Blacks moved out of historically African-American communities such as Inglewood and Compton to inland communities such as Fontana, Rialto, San Bernardino, Riverside and the high desert city of Barstow.

Census experts say it's not surprising that Blacks and Latinos move to where it is less expensive to live and work. Because of the high cost of doing business in Los Angeles, many companies are either moving or outsourcing their low-end jobs to less congested counties like Riverside and San Bernardino were it's cheaper.

Although Hispanics dominate Los Angeles County's demographics, it also has nearly one million African-American residents, trailing only Cook County, which has 1.4 million.

African-American's increased by 1.3 percent to 40.2 million, comprising about 13.3 percent of the nation's population.

Nationally, the number of minorities topped 100 million for the first time in 2006 - about a third of the population. By 2050, minorities will account for half of U.S. residents, according to Census Bureau projections.

No question San Bernardino and Riverside Counties will feel the effects of the historic migration from Los Angeles eastward, says William Frey, demographer at the Brookings Institution.

"The new wave of immigration, along with its continued dispersal to the suburbs and Sun Belt, is transforming the places which are now being classified as multiethnic and majority-minority," said Frey. "We'll be able to see how well America can adapt to multiethnic populations.

Over the next half-century, California's population will explode by nearly 75%, and Riverside will add 3.1 million by 2050, an increase of almost 3.5 million residents to become the second most populous county after Los Angeles, according to state Department of Finance projections released in mid July. With less expensive housing than the coast, Riverside County has grown by more than 472,000 residents since 2000 according to state estimates.

San Bernardino County is not far behind with a total population of 1,916,665 and a combined minority population of 54.3 percent.

It's opportunity with baggage," said Jack Kyser, chief economist for the Los Angeles Economic Development Corp., in a country masquerading as a state."


http://www.blackvoicenews.com/content/view/41167/4/
 
notice how the above article titled "Blacks and Latinos Majority in Many U.S. Counties" still refers to us as "minorities" in the body of the article :smh:
 
When you combine the two stories/realities above: "Mounting Racial Tensions 'Resegregating' America" and "Blacks and Latinos Majority in Many U.S. Counties" there can't help but be some interesting results in the near future.
 
bigirl said:
notice how the above article titled "Blacks and Latinos Majority in Many U.S. Counties" still refers to us as "minorities" in the body of the article :smh:
Not to defend either article, but are Blacks and Latinos a majority in the United States; or just in the 10% of counties surveyed?

QueEx
 
QueEx said:
Not to defend either article, but are Blacks and Latinos a majority in the United States; or just in the 10% of counties surveyed?

QueEx
I am fairly certain that if you put Blacks, Latinos and Mixed people with African descent together we are the majority. A very good example of how they sub divide people into smaller groups to make things appear how they want them to. If the classification was brown people vs. white people, we are the majority. On a worldwide level, whites are definitely the minority.
 
BG,

Who are "they" ??? The articles above were written by Black journalists. Are they trying to make "things appear how they want them to"? If so, what do you think they are trying to portray? I'm asking because maybe I missed the underlying message of the articles (which I am proned to do).

QueEx
 
QueEx said:
BG,

Who are "they" ??? The articles above were written by Black journalists. Are they trying to make "things appear how they want them to"? If so, what do you think they are trying to portray? I'm asking because maybe I missed the underlying message of the articles (which I am proned to do).

QueEx
No I didn't mean "they" as in the journalists. I ment "they" as in whoever makes up these stupid racial classifications(some crackas). I have no problem with either journalist. Like I said, I see what they describe in the first article all around. I just feel that white people make these subdivisions of racial classification to mask the fact that they in reality are the minority.
 
I find it amazing that most whites lump all so called Latinos and Latinas in to one political or ethic category. I grew up in the New York City area and in my neighborhood many Dominicans, Puerto Ricans Panamanians and others had considered themselves more African than many Americans of African decent. When I lived in Florida, a Columbian friend of mine said he didn’t like Mexicans. He said they were dirty. There is no common thought among Latinos. Those from south Texas are more conservative, younger Cuban Americans are less conservative than their parents. The Latinos in California, the North East and Chicago tend to be liberal. Republicans saw that the could use religion to galvanize Latinos to vote for them, but since the immigration debate, they have lost most of them. Divide and conquer is the white theme, which is used to the hilt by conservatives.
 
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