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Lutraphile, you are doing nothing but spewing a stereotype you have been fed.
Either that, or as I have seen, racists seem to attract other racists....
Look to NYC, Philly, Chicago, DC, you will find more segregation in those cities. Look at the large cities with Democratic strongholds. Each race seems to have their delegated neighborhoods. And few cross those lines.
Why does the south seem to inevitably push for school vouchers? Because the most in the south want equal opportunity for all.
Either that, or as I have seen, racists seem to attract other racists....
Look to NYC, Philly, Chicago, DC, you will find more segregation in those cities. Look at the large cities with Democratic strongholds. Each race seems to have their delegated neighborhoods. And few cross those lines.
Why does the south seem to inevitably push for school vouchers? Because the most in the south want equal opportunity for all.
Virginia in theory, but Tennessee really (I'm right on the line and it is very much the south culturally). There are an awful lot of "I'm not racist but..." style statements and a lot of the Obama hatred in this area is pretty openly racist- I went to a Romney rally in 2012 and while Romney himself stuck to his stump speech the local Tea Party people who presented him on stage and basically ran the event very much did not, referred to him as "Hussein" and even as "African."Where do you live at Alabama Mississippi ? I don't see racism at all in the upstate of south Carolina or even read about it, the north is by far more racist and segregated I never even seen a black kid in grade school in the northwest burbs of Chicago growing up.I live in the south. There is definitely still racism here, not to mention homophobia and extremely negative attitudes towards non-Christians. Having said that, it is getting better, albeit slowly.