|
Edited on Fri Aug-15-03 06:31 PM by kcwayne
I have lived in California, New York, Virgina, Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin, and Texas.
Of all the places, California was the least racist, although it certainly was there because my father is a true cracker redneck, and he still has alot of people he calls friends there. He only associates with people with his same rediculous world view. He moved out of California because "it was infested with Japs, niggers, and spics" (a real humanitarian)
When I was shopping for a house in Wisconsin (Milwaukee), when I mentioned the neighborhoods I was looking at my co-workers commented, "Thats a little dark there, hey".
My mother lives in North West Wisconsin, and they absolutely detest Indians up there. (There is a Chippewa reservation in her area).
In New York, people in my neighborhood (Brooklyn and Bronx) hated Puerto Ricans and blacks.
In Virginia, they especially hated blacks (this was in the days of whites only counters and rest rooms)
In Texas, they hated blacks, Mexicans, and Methodists.
In Illinois and Indiana white people hate blacks, and as more Latinos move in, the hatred is expanding to them too.
I belong to a golf club in Indiana, where most of the members are professionals. They make stupid racists comments constantly, but are extremely two faced in that they would never say these things in the presence of blacks or latinos. They really hate democrats and liberals.
In my experience, racism and stupid people are everywhere. There are differences in how it is expressed, but it is always there.
An interesting (to me) side note about my father. He was born on a Cherokee reservation in Oklahoma. My great grandfather lived there, and my grandmother was of mixed blood (Irish and Cherokee). My grandparents were migrant laborers and stopped at the reservation in their travels so my grandmother could give birth to him. Both my grandmother and my father were/are racists of the worst kind. Neither have Indian features (she had red hair), so they passed for white. But I have never understood how they could be so blind to their racism given their life circumstances.
|