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Location: The western periphery of Terra Australis
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I was thinking, in a way minorities in cities with fewer minorities would be less likely to be type-cast and less likely to live in segregated areas. Sacramento, I always thought, was a very white city, so I suppose many of the blacks there can't help but integrate.
NYC is very segregated by race and ethnicity. There is some mingling through work and school but even then you'll often see cliques divided along race/ethnic lines.
That said there is some interracial dating and integration especially between whites and Asians.
I find that people that come from a military background are often used to dealing with people of different backgrounds. Last time I was in Norfolk, Vir. I was pleasantly surprised by the seemingly smooth relations among the black and white military people.
Seriously dude...enough with the silly posts! If you browsed the site enough, you could find your answer!
I beg to differ. I doubt the OP just wants to settle for some "la-de-da multicultural/diverse" city where in reality, every race is at each others throats like in NYC, Philly, Chicago, or Miami; Or better yet, every other race is aligned against a particular underrepresented minority, i.e. how every other race in the Northeast is generally anti-black or people in the Southwest cities that are anti-Latino).
As for the most integrated city, the best places are either west of the Mississippi River (a given), or if they want to stick east, don't rely on city centers/downtowns, but look for neighborhoods and communities that were built (not gentrified, but built) after the 1970s. In the DC area for example, places such as Reston, Herndon, Falls Church, Silver Spring, Takoma, and a FEW other places that are legitimately integrated were either recently developed in the past few decades or were revitalized. Even though the city itself (and the bordering places like Arlington, Alexandria, and Bethesda) are pretty diverse, this usually is seen during the "working" or "leisure" hours; and during the leisure hours, people tend to either stay in racially monolithic cliques or the whites will usually have a sprinkle of "model minorities" with them. And even though a lot of gentrification is occurring within the district, many people who move to these places tend to have a more "subdue" racial tension towards the minorities that formerly lived there and are still visible (and I'm not just talking about the uneducated and crime causing ones, but this lingering hatred is targeted towards all people of that particular race).
So this is the complicated case for racial integration in the DC area in my eyes. It's better than your "average joe" American city, but is pathetic when compared with most cities out West - the irony being that the most westward you go within the DC area itself, the more racially integrated it gets.
City of Sacramento is very diverse. Its the suburbs that are white.
Not necessarily. What about communities like Elk Grove, Davis, Rancho Cordova, Parkway-South Sacramento, Florin, Foothill Farms, North Highlands, Antelope and a few others?
I beg to differ. I doubt the OP just wants to settle for some "la-de-da multicultural/diverse" city where in reality, every race is at each others throats like in NYC, Philly, Chicago, or Miami; Or better yet, every other race is aligned against a particular underrepresented minority, i.e. how every other race in the Northeast is generally anti-black or people in the Southwest cities that are anti-Latino).
As for the most integrated city, the best places are either west of the Mississippi River (a given), or if they want to stick east, don't rely on city centers/downtowns, but look for neighborhoods and communities that were built (not gentrified, but built) after the 1970s. In the DC area for example, places such as Reston, Herndon, Falls Church, Silver Spring, Takoma, and a FEW other places that are legitimately integrated were either recently developed in the past few decades or were revitalized. Even though the city itself (and the bordering places like Arlington, Alexandria, and Bethesda) are pretty diverse, this usually is seen during the "working" or "leisure" hours; and during the leisure hours, people tend to either stay in racially monolithic cliques or the whites will usually have a sprinkle of "model minorities" with them. And even though a lot of gentrification is occurring within the district, many people who move to these places tend to have a more "subdue" racial tension towards the minorities that formerly lived there and are still visible (and I'm not just talking about the uneducated and crime causing ones, but this lingering hatred is targeted towards all people of that particular race).
So this is the complicated case for racial integration in the DC area in my eyes. It's better than your "average joe" American city, but is pathetic when compared with most cities out West - the irony being that the most westward you go within the DC area itself, the more racially integrated it gets.
Where do you get this about the Northeast? Sure there is racism in the region, but I was wondering where you came up with this?
Actually, one of the oldest and poorest neighborhoods in my city called the Near West Side, is 41% Black, 30% White, 26% Hispanic and 2% Native American. That's not including the ethnic diversity within the general groups too. Even the predominately Black sections of the city, with maybe one small exception, still have their share of Whites and lately Hispanics. This is the same to a large degree with the predominately White parts of the city too.
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