Really?
Projections of the Size and Composition of the U.S. Population: 2014 to 2060
Between 2014 and 2060, the U.S. population is projected
to increase from 319 million to 417 million,
reaching 400 million in 2051. The U.S. population is
projected to grow more slowly in future decades than
in the recent past, as these projections assume that
fertility rates will continue to decline and that there will
be a modest decline in the overall rate of net international
migration. By 2030, one in five Americans is
projected to be 65 and over;
by 2044, more than half
of all Americans are projected to belong to a minority
group (any group other than non-Hispanic White alone);
and by 2060, nearly one in five of the nation’s total
population is projected to be foreign born.
https://census.gov/content/dam/Census/library/publications/2015/demo/p25-1143.pdf
2016 - Babies Of Color Are Now The Majority, Census Says
Today's generation of schoolchildren looks much different than one just a few decades ago. Nonwhites are expected to become the majority of the nation's children by 2020, as our colleague Bill Chappell reported last year. This is now the reality among the very youngest Americans: babies.
Babies of color now outnumber non-Hispanic white babies (1 year or younger), according to new estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau. The newest estimate shows that on July 1, 2015, the population of racial or ethnic minority babies was 50.2 percent.
But the scales may have actually tipped in 2013 — the Census Bureau often revises past population estimates as new data become available. That means the first of these babies are now preschool-aged.
We've already been seeing this shift in U.S. schools: the 2014-15 school year marked the first time that minority student enrollment in public schools surpassed that of white students.
https://www.npr.org/sections/ed/201...ies-of-color-are-now-the-majority-census-says
Diversity .. either you have it or you don't.