Discreet Dolls

Separate and Impoverished: America’s Black Poor

danmand

Well-known member
Nov 28, 2003
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Separate and Impoverished: America’s Black Poor

by Jesse Jackson
Sen. Bernie Sanders, the Democratic candidate for president, shocked people when he noted that 51 percent of African-Americans aged 17 through 20 who have graduated high school or dropped out of high school are unemployed.

PolitiFact.com confirmed the statement as “mostly true,” suggesting that the numbers might even be worse than Sanders suggested.

This level of unemployment is a death sentence for a generation — representing for too many the dying of hope, of potential and even, in an age of mass incarceration, of freedom.

The figure is shocking, but the reality cannot be denied. For all the progress we have made on race in this country, there is still a stark difference between black and white poverty. As Emily Badger reports in the Washington Post, “The poverty that poor African-Americans experience is often different from the poverty of poor whites.” A poor black family is much more likely to live in an impoverished neighborhood. The concentrated poverty, as Badger writes, “extends out the door of a family’s home and occupies the entire neighborhood around it, touching the streets, the schools, the grocery stores.”

A new report on the “Architecture of Segregation” by Paul Jargowsky for the New Century Foundation details the stark differences that exist in cities across the country. In metropolitan Chicago, for example, more than one in three poor African-Americans live in what are called high-poverty census tracts (neighborhoods where the poverty rate is above 40 percent). That is 10 times the rate for poor whites. And it has gotten worse, not better, in cities across the country over the course of this century.

Separate and impoverished. We know the effects. Infants suffer bad nutrition, grow up surrounded by lead paint. Children navigate mean streets to go to impoverished schools. They lack after-school and summer programs. Families break apart. Guns and drugs come in; jobs go out. There’s no affordable transportation to get to where the jobs are. Houses are abandoned. Hospitals close. Decent grocery stores are nowhere to be found.

As Jargowsky says, this isn’t really an accident. It is the product of systemic discrimination, of zoning laws that shield off wealthy areas from the poor, of public housing that is concentrated in a few neighborhoods. Isolation in poor neighborhoods is an imposition, not a choice.

This could be different. In London, for example, every region must have some social housing for poor and working class people. Imagine if every suburb were required to provide a proportionate amount of housing for the poor and the lower-wage workers. Suddenly the poor would have access to better schools, better health care, safer streets, more role models and healthier (and less expensive) food stores.

This takes a plan, a plan that will meet great resistance. Dozens of Chicago’s wealthy suburbs, Badger notes, have ignored state deadlines to produce affordable housing plans.

Poor African-Americans are penned up, in poor neighborhoods and too often literally in jails and prisons. This is an imposition, not a fate, a policy choice that is morally indefensible and socially explosive.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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Speaking of which, this story is almost unbelievable but true.
Homan Square revealed: how Chicago police 'disappeared' 7,000 people
Exclusive: Guardian lawsuit exposes fullest scale yet of detentions at off-the-books interrogation warehouse, while attorneys describe find-your-client chase across Chicago as ‘something from a Bond movie’
http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/...icago-police-disappeared-thousands?CMP=twt_gu

The home of the free and brave, and their racist police state.
 

danmand

Well-known member
Nov 28, 2003
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Jesse Jackson, who are you going to quote next "Al" Sharpton or Louis Farrakhan?
It must be painful for you to see opinions by black americans on this site. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton are greater americans than your idols.
 

ZenSouljah

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Aug 26, 2005
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Funny how I have some friends down in the states who instead of turning to a life of crime like a lot of their friends, went to school, went on to post secondary, and now live a very good life. That was a choice they made, just like the choice made by the others to not go that path. Is it easy? No, in the areas they were from it wasn't, but as I said, they made the choice and did what they had to do to get a better life.
 

basketcase

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Dec 29, 2005
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When you live in chronic poverty the choice to work hard in school first requires opportunity. If your family NEEDS you to help pay bills, you are the primary care giver for younger siblings, or have absent parents studying hard and doing well in school isn't always an option.

Of course there are some people who make a life for themselves but there are many others too busy just trying to survive.
 

ZenSouljah

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Aug 26, 2005
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They went to school and held down part time jobs after. One went on to college via scholarship, the others paid their way by working. They all supported single parent moms and had siblings. As I said, easy? No, doable, Yes.
 

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
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Basing an overall opinion based on the outstanding achievements of a few. Of course it's doable for some but it sure is a lot harder for them than much of the US and that is the point.
 

fuji

Banned
Jan 31, 2005
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¯\_(ツ)_/¯
is.gd
Hilarious that this thread coming from a Dane. Denmark is so racist that in Copenhagen blacks cannot even get served in a pub. At least in the US a black guy can get a cold one.
 

onthebottom

Never Been Justly Banned
Jan 10, 2002
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Hooterville
www.scubadiving.com
I'm not sure it helps blacks in the US that 2/3 are born out of wedlock, and 67% live in single family homes (vs 35% for US at large). Only 69% of blacks graduate from Highschool..... I don't think it's an accident that those stats are so close....

1/3 young black men are under control of the criminal justice system.

Jessie is a joke, surprised there is anyone who doesn't know that.
 
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