cawacko
Well-known member
My friend just posted this on Facebook this morning, he must have been following our discussion:
""Notice the most dangerous cities in California. You will see Oakland, San Francisco and East Palo Alto are not on the list. Now these cities make the list of some of the most expensive places to live in California. The classic bait and switch has happened over the last 20 years. Now the hood that was once East Oakland is in Stockton and the violence that went with it. This was a well thought out plan. Bait and switch and people fell for it left and right. Now you are priced out trapped in the new hoods. Only 17 African Americans bought homes in Oakland last year. Prime real estate gone!- Shawn G.""
So basically he's talking about (white) gentrification of the cities. So here's the opposite to your OP and what you called racism. White people moving into largely minority areas would make areas more diverse on paper right? Clearly not all people are fans.
When my family moved to Oakland in 1981 it was 50% black. Today it is 25% black, 25% Hispanic, 25% Asian and 25% white. On paper a perfect diverse mix. Ask many black people though and they'll say like my friend does that blacks have lost the City and a lot of their culture went with it.
""Notice the most dangerous cities in California. You will see Oakland, San Francisco and East Palo Alto are not on the list. Now these cities make the list of some of the most expensive places to live in California. The classic bait and switch has happened over the last 20 years. Now the hood that was once East Oakland is in Stockton and the violence that went with it. This was a well thought out plan. Bait and switch and people fell for it left and right. Now you are priced out trapped in the new hoods. Only 17 African Americans bought homes in Oakland last year. Prime real estate gone!- Shawn G.""
So basically he's talking about (white) gentrification of the cities. So here's the opposite to your OP and what you called racism. White people moving into largely minority areas would make areas more diverse on paper right? Clearly not all people are fans.
When my family moved to Oakland in 1981 it was 50% black. Today it is 25% black, 25% Hispanic, 25% Asian and 25% white. On paper a perfect diverse mix. Ask many black people though and they'll say like my friend does that blacks have lost the City and a lot of their culture went with it.
