RDKirk said:
You clearly took it personally because your response was a personal anecdote instead of a contradictory study.
Do you not GET the significance of "I don't trust studies very much"? I surely do not trust any surveys or studies of 'racism' in the United States for the reasons I mentioned previously?
RDKirk said:
Yes. There is a national raffle held every five years for black friendships. Tickets are available at participating KFCs and McDonalds. Many will enter, few will win.
How many tickets must I buy in order to escape the 'racist' label? Does Al Sharpton get a cut of the gross?
Stop. That was offered in the same spirit as your comment.
RDKirk said:
The truth is, black people are not "evenly distributed" across the US. ..."sundown towns"...
I'm familiar with the phenomenon. Never thought highly of the concept.
RDKirk said:
I was in that cohort of black youngsters in the 60s that first experienced integration.
Interesting. When I went to grade school (in the 1950s, Portland, Oregon) all the public schools I attended were integrated. I confess I wondered about such a thing being an issue at the time.
We lived in a 'mixed' neighborhood. The east side of the street was mostly white, the west side of the same residential street (Cleveland Avenue) was mostly black. I don't remember any other ethnicities in that area.
I do remember a couple of black men were visiting their friends across the street. They drove up on two motorcycles. A (mixed) bunch of kids crowded around them to see the motorcycles. The two men didn't voice any concerns or displeasure that some of the kids were white. That seemed 'normal' to me. I was in third grade at the time.
RDKirk said:
Because I was a bookworm, a nerd, a geek even before those latter two terms were invented...
Had we gone to school together, we would have probably been friends. I have the same sort of attitude.
RDKirk said:
I suck mightily at sports...
Yeah, we'd have been friends.
RDKirk said:
That's my only point: A lot of white people in the US have not been around blacks to have befriended any, and it's not their fault.
Fair enough. I've made black friends. People with whom I worked or served. My best friend in Marine Corps Basic Training was a black man. I think we ended up as friends as we were the only two people in the platoon with a degree. I had a High School diploma and he had a Master's. But I could pronounce, spell and understood the meaning of 'pedantic', AND I had read more classics than required in High School. He was several years older and I think he thought I had promise.
We met - in Marine Corps Reserve - several years later and resumed where we left off. Sad to say, we've lost touch since then. But I've lost touch with several other friends I should have been more careful about as well. I tend to focus on present situations.
However, part of the original discussion was 'a person of another race'. In the service and later in my career I was associated with a number of 'other races'.
I knew a couple of Native Americans. We worked together and had - I think - I measure of mutual respect for each other. But the ones with whom I worked tended to go to the Enlisted Club after work and get snockered. I didn't do that, so we never got to be 'friends' as such.
I knew some people of 'Asian' ancestry. The descriptor always made me laugh, as Asia is a land mass with many ethnic groups. Not all of them are 'yellow', either.
What I found was Christianity tended to bind as brothers and friends much quicker than ethnicity. Regardless of ethnicity.