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Originally Posted by cancelthat
I am a 35 year old African American married female with a 4 year old son.I am a nurse that is relocating to Plano,Texas from Long Island,New York. When I told my co-workers and family about the move, the overwhelming response was"With all the rednecks?" I have never been to Texas and my only exposure to the culture there has been what I've seen on TV and in movies.What exacttly is a "redneck" and should we expect to encounter many of them in Plano? Is this area racially and culturally diverse? We have lived in and around NewYork City our entire lives and like the diversity that exists here. We have to drive to Texas and have been warned by many that driving through the south is dangerous for African Americans, is this also true. All responses are welcomed!!!
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Coming from an African-American male living in Atlanta, and having visited D/FW many times in the past, I can certainly tell you that you really don't have much to worry about. D/FW is hardly what I describe as "redneck", and believe me, I lived in Mississippi for 9 long years, so I know country when I see it. You aren't going to see people commuting by horse to work (yeah, people actually believe that stupidity) or wearing 10-gallon hats all the time. I have quite a few friends who relocated to the D/FW area (many of the African-American persuasion, surprise surprise), and are thriving and doing quite well for themselves, personally and professionally. Same here in ATL too.
It's amazing the misconceptions people have about the south. I remember taking my aunt who left Mississippi over 50 years ago and has been living in California for a 25 cent tour around Atlanta, and when I was driving past a mall, she said that she heard that "black people still weren't allowed in there". This was in 2007, BTW. I told her that she really needed to get out more.
A question for you: Those people who were telling you about Texas, had they ever been there?
And if the south is so horrid for blacks, why are there so many black people living here and relocating here from up north in droves?
Let's face it, racism is everywhere and is not something exclusive to the South. And of course, you can find it here if you look hard enough, but that's applicable anywhere you go. Now there may be rural parts you may need to avoid, because from what I've heard, Vidor is a town that a black person needs to avoid, but that's way down near Beaumont.
As for driving through the south, I have driven several times to Mississippi and to Washington, DC through some of the most country-fried areas of the country, slept in Rest stops deep in the heart of Alabama, ate at Waffle Houses and Burger Kings and still managed to live to tell about it.
