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In all honesty I do seek to accept people as individuals, not as members of a group. But bias does exist -- to deny it is silly.
Yes, against Black Americans, no one else. But even Black Americans will never be able to find equality until the individual is prioritized over subgroups.
Yes, as I said things have been changing, but the white neighborhoods overall in the Bronx are still majority white like Woodlawn, Riverdale, Country Club, City Island and parts of Throggs Neck. They with the exception of Woodlawn are generally also the most expensive parts of the Bronx, so money in addition to their isolation helps to keep them white since they are mainly homeowner neighborhoods versus neighborhoods with lots of renters.
I'm guessing Riverdale? It was in the papers how Assemblyman Dinowitz was accused of trying to block black and Hispanic kids from gaining admission to P.S. 24. Apparently one of the schools in Spuyten Duyvil (Riverdale) has been facing severe overcrowding and he has been saying that too many people don't live in Riverdale have been using backdoor methods to enroll their kids into the school because the school is seen as better in terms of how students perform, safety, etc. Many or a large majority of them apparently are minorities and mainly Hispanic, and he has argued that children who actually live in Riverdale have not been able to attend the school as a result as they don't have room for them. This isn't the first time he's come under scrutiny. For years there have been complaints that black and brown kids were purposely being kept of the schools in Riverdale and being put into JFK instead which is primarily minority in Kingsbridge.
Story below:
"Assemblyman Tried to Block Minorities From Attending Riverdale School: Suit"
If it isn't that school, then it can only be one of those expensive private schools in Riverdale (Horace Mann, Riverdale Country School or the Ethical Culture Fieldston), but I've never heard of any of them having discrimination issues. Plenty of parents send their kids there from Westchester, and they are of all backgrounds, though most of the kids are white and some are Asian, black or Latino. Tuition at those schools are so expensive that it comes down to money. Parents easily fork over $50,000+ a year on tuition. Another possibility is Maria Villa in Country Club, but I've never heard of any discrimination issues there either.
Because it is a waste of personal time, resources, and emotion. Just do you. Stop having rabbit ears. Be an individual.
You're telling him to be an individual, and at the same time, you're telling him what he should do (or what he shouldn't do). If you think he should be an individual, let him decide for himself what he cares about.
You're telling him to be an individual, and at the same time, you're telling him what he should do (or what he shouldn't do). If you think he should be an individual, let him decide for himself what he cares about.
Then he should actually do it then. Maybe start with law school.
So spill the beans. What neighborhood was it?!?? Obviously not Bedford Park where the trees are made of gold.
I don't want to be too specific about anything school-related. One of her kids is still a student there.
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