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I would keep in mind that (at least from what I gather), most people posting on here are white. I may be wrong, but take their "no racial problems here" with a grain of salt. Not saying anyone is racist, just saying they might not have the background to comment on it honestly. I am white and most of my white friends would not think twice about such a relationship, though I've have heard some older -- and younger -- white folks say things that made me blush. Having never been in an interracial relationship other than dating an Asian girl briefly in college, I can't really comment on what issues interracial couples might deal with here. So again, grain of salt, but I would steer clear of most of the burbs, Monroe especially, (this is just from my experiences). Racial tensions high there. University City is probably the most diverse part of town and you can find a nice house there relatively cheap. But it is very spread out and has some traffic problems. Uptown is yuppie but I don't think you would find any problems there. Dilworth probably 80 percent white, more family-oriented but also more live-and-let-live (very expensive though). Plaza-Midwood is a gentrifying area with lots of funky shops and artists, its fairly diverse, and I don't think you would have any trouble there, but it is a game of good-block, bad-block a lot of the time when it comes to crime there. Ballantyne is overwhelmingly white and more conservative as is most of south charlotte.
Bottom line, from my personal observation, the areas where people are more educated and more exposed to diversity tend to be where interracial couples get along the best.
Geeeezzz. Coped gave good advice. So did Seapr. There are always gonna be some people who look twice and like everywhere else in this country, there are downright bigots. I think Coped nailed it when he said - go where people are educated and you will find diversity there and smoother sailing. I don't know that it is accurate to say "South Charlotte is conservative." Maybe this means - S. Charlotte is mostly white - but the truth is - there are asians, hispanics and black folks in S. Charlotte, as well as gay couples, living happily. The demographics are changing - lots of people moving in from other areas. Money is the big equalizer here. If you are a good neighbor and pleasant to be around. . . your ethnicity is not going to be an issue. If you are a jerk, people are gonna shun you regardless of ethnicity, sexual orientation or where you are from. You can drive around, do some shopping and get the feel of any area that interests you. Like an earlier poster said . . . you know the drill. People are people everywhere - some are idiots but most aren't. It's no different here.
Absolutely. This is true in any city every day of the week.
Quote:
Originally Posted by coped
Bottom line, from my personal observation, the areas where people are more educated and more exposed to diversity tend to be where interracial couples get along the best.
I would keep in mind that (at least from what I gather), most people posting on here are white. I may be wrong, but take their "no racial problems here" with a grain of salt. Not saying anyone is racist, just saying they might not have the background to comment on it honestly.
What kind of racial statement is that? A lot of assumptions here buddy. I would recommend that you please speak for yourself and not for other gracious posters here when it comes to your unsupported gatherings.
Yes, I assume those who 'constructively' take the time to comment on this thread are, indeed, providing honest commentary based on their own experiences. And just as race should not have bearing on a person's value, being 'white' does not negate a person's ability to make constructive, productive or realistic racial commentary. Do you honestly feel that only a person of a particular group has proper knowledge and authority of subject matters directly related to their own race?
No one person here or anywhere course can ever entirely make absolute statements or assumptions about any given population, regardless of statistics. But such blanket 'grain of salt' gatherings about 'whites' only debilitates (rather than promotes) the progress of racial interaction and insults those who's experience, regardless of race, are on the positive end of a belief system.
I agree with you that education and exposure to diversity is the key to success. But that is with anything one must accept as a differing factor from the each individual's perspective on what they consider is normal for them.
However, I actually find it refreshing that more individuals here are providing positive commentary and outlook on racial coupling here in North Carolina. It may mean that a majority of our population is, indeed, progressing closer to a color blind society. A society where such a concern presented by the OP will be one never considered. As constructively subjective and individually honest your commentary may have been, Coped, your assumptions, or gatherings, quoted above are certainly not adding to such color blind aspirations.
What kind of racial statement is that? A lot of assumptions here buddy. I would recommend that you please speak for yourself and not for other gracious posters here when it comes to your unsupported gatherings.
Yes, I assume those who 'constructively' take the time to comment on this thread are, indeed, providing honest commentary based on their own experiences. And just as race should not have bearing on a person's value, being 'white' does not negate a person's ability to make constructive, productive or realistic racial commentary.
Of course it doesn't but I really don't understand your problem with this poster's statement. Everyone views life through their own lens based on their experiences. If you were in an interracial relationship, you might view events in a different way. Doesn't make your way wrong of my way right, it's just different. Why would one think that make one more valid. Advice from someone with a similar lens might be more insightfull. Might.
Perfect example. I have yet to see an Anglo come to this board and ask if Area XXX is welcoming to White people. Or a straight person ask is Area XXX a good place for heterosexual families. I would assume that the question doesn't occur to them. So their answer may be colored by that experience or lack of. Different lens.
I get that you would like a color blind society, but the poster asked the question and so far, everyone is giving their honest opinion. I'm not sure how that undermines race relations.
Location: Some got six month some got one solid. But me and my buddies all got lifetime here
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Quote:
Originally Posted by baybook
Of course it doesn't but I really don't understand your problem with this poster's statement. Everyone views life through their own lens based on their experiences. If you were in an interracial relationship, you might view events in a different way. Doesn't make your way wrong of my way right, it's just different. Why would one think that make one more valid. Advice from someone with a similar lens might be more insightfull. Might.
I would even argue that getting well constructed advice from a white person might be better than from an interracial couple. Figure it this way: they're the ones who know what's being said behind people's backs that they don't have the guts to say in person. I'd value that a lot more in that instance.
I would even argue that getting well constructed advice from a white person might be better than from an interracial couple. Figure it this way: they're the ones who know what's being said behind people's backs that they don't have the guts to say in person. I'd value that a lot more in that instance.
That might be true if the person felt comfortable about being openly bigoted. Otherwise, someone with a similar lens might be more in tune to the type of nuances that the op would be aware of. IE: Staring, pointing, double take, etc... I'm not dismissing anyone's opinion. They all matter. But as in your example, we all bring different dishes to the buffet.
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