Systemic racism in the US: Why is it happening and what can be done?
Actually I might know the problem. Refer here and here. Let me know what you think, — StreetlightX
“Seven of the 10 states with the highest poverty rates in the U.S. are in the South ... These areas have a long history of poverty and there are many factors contributing to it, but the most obvious are that they were agricultural economies first and foremost with light emphasis on education and innovation.
High school graduation rates for African-American and Hispanic students are almost 20 percentage points lower than for other ethnic groups ... Without the knowledge and skills required for well-remunerated work in the modern workplace, each succeeding generation of undereducated adults merely replaces the one before it without achieving any upward mobility or escape from poverty”.
https://www.debt.org/faqs/americans-in-debt/poverty-united-states/
From what I’ve read the biggest contributors to poverty for all people is: low education, teen births, imprisonment and poor health.
This creates low opportunities for employment or better paid work which leads directly to poverty, which leads to breakdown of the family, crime, neglect of education, dependency and unemployment. It’s the vicious cycle of poverty.
Racism may contribute to some of this, but does it contribute to a failure in education, teen births and family breakdown? Everyone who is uneducated gets low wages or fewer opportunities.
Would blacks be deprived of access to education? I don’t know. If they were I would regard that as racism.
In response to your posts about a Marxist point of view I understand the relationship of poverty and race to class issues.
“If you help all poor people equally regardless of race, you disproportionately help black people automatically because the poor are disproportionately black.
— Pfhorrest
Who could argue with this? I don’t doubt that systemic racism existed in the south. But there seem to be real factors besides racism that have contributed to black poverty.