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I don't think the city of Marysville, MI wanted to get notoriety for this reason. I looked up that town. It is located next to the city of Port Huron. I thought about this. Port Huron is 84% White and 9.1% Black. Marysville, next door, is 97.5% White and 0.3% Black. Marysville is home to a U.S. Customs and Border Protection facility (Marysville is on the border with Canada). It used to be home to a Morton Salt plant. It was closed in 2015. This likely accounts for Marysville's population dropping in the last 5 years. I thought about this. With Port Huron and Marysville being next to each other, why haven't more Blacks gone to Marysville? I'm mean, Marysville grew in population through 2010 while Port Huron has been declining.
Probably white people are voting with their feet and dollars to live in the more homogenous neighborhood. They should be able to make it official policy. There's really no reason to not tolerate the homogenous community existing other than being against that racial group.
I'm the only one saying it's acceptable to vote to keep a community homogenous or vote to not. Everyone else is saying it is entirely unacceptable.
And I'm saying whoever wants to live in a community, regardless of race, can live there, and no one should prevent anyone of any race/ethnicity from living there. That "no Blacks allowed" chapter in U.S. history is over. Time to move on.
Well, I'm happy with the current arrangement, and you haven't given me a reason to change my mind.
So if something is to your liking and beneficial to you personally, then it must be right.
Well then by that standard I'm right too and there can be no wrong.
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