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What is it about white liberals who seem to need to go through this hand-wringing about race? It's hard to imagine 2 black people who are residents of Detroit sitting around obsessing about "Why is Detroit so black?" As for the term, "multicultural", we need rather to think of the goal is to be a multiracial nation with one culture. Victor David Hanson says it best: "The very affluent, mostly white, liberal people who use it (the word 'multicultural') don't actually want the police in their neighborhood to have the culture of Mexican officers. They don't want to be treated with the same medical protocols that prevail in China. They don't want their daughters to have clitorectomies as in Sudan.........what they really mean is they want a core culture that is Western, enhanced by exotica on the periphery, such as fashion, food, literature, and movies."
I think that a factor in this discussion, leading to statistical analyses of subjects, such as this, is the fact that many of the kids and uberkids making these sorts of metaphorical statistical determinations weren't even alive when there were serious, everyday issues in play. I will admit that where I grew up the minority group was mostly Hispanic and the only five "black people" in my schools (including the U of C) were athletes or cheerleaders.
Since those primitive times . . . c. '65 to '72 . . . I have, here in Oklahoma, learned to appreciate the common qualities of good people.
Regardless of color.
One thing that I've noticed is: The Common Denominator of Folks Who Share My Perspective Here is Gray. =)
Regardless of "race".
And that is just a little bit sad, it you think about it . . . =)
I have to admit, that, while doing a couple of walking laps around the Myriad Gardens, this morning, and smoking a cigar, in order to capture the beauty of Autumn, I tried to steer clear of those Mormon Guys sharing "My Space" . . . and simply replied, "Really Well" . . . in response to the "How you doin' today . . ?"
DP due to Matrix BS (and that is just a little bit sad, it you think about it . . . =)
Seattle, in the area where I grew up ( South Seattle, Rainer Valley) was very multicultural. I went to Rainer Beach High School, which was a mix of white, black, Asian, Samoian, and Filipino. Loved the experience, and it's a beautiful city ( on a non-rainy day) lol. There were some neighborhoods that were mostly white, Ballard, and North Seattle.
When I live out of state, I miss the Salt Water of Puget Sound, the snow-capped mountains of the Olympic and Cascade mountain ranges, and of course the big mountain- Mt. Rainer.
Plus, being so far north, in summer, we get long sunsets over the Olympic mountains, with twilight lasting till 10 pm.
There was a video circulating back when the SuperSonics/thunder stuff starterd. The actors portrayed themselves as the first black people to come to okc. It was kind of funny., but I thought that it was odd that people in Seattle seemed to think everyone was white in Oklahoma. I’ve spent a few weeks in Seattle and Oregon a few years back and the paleness is overwhelmingly obvious in contrast to here.
Why are we reviving multiple threads that have been dead for a decade?
I an new to this Forum, and just noticed this, I live in Seattle....
Despite how white the Pacific Northwest statistically is, I feel people outside of that region tend to underestimate how pronounced the Asian and Indigenous cultural influence is, spanning beyond ethnic lines. Even with people that appear white, there’s a lot of Russian and Ukrainian families that have migrated within the last 20-30 years, which adds to the white culture there feeling distinct to white culture in other parts of the U.S.
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