Some Excerpts(total read is 11 minutes):
A lot more i encourage people read this. I know how many of us kind of talk about racism at purely a white and black level, but i found it interesting(no shocked) that no matter the success level of the minority there is a level of racism and bias even with the poorly called "model minority" where many people say how if they can succeed why cant other minorities etc but again this is a great example of it not mattering how high they go. They all face racism.
https://psmag.com/ghosts-of-white-p...om-an-asian-ethnoburb-b550ba986cdb#.y0icoq7uw
Over the next nine years, I have front row seats to a white exodus from Johns Creek, a suburb located 25 miles outside of Atlanta. The majority of these white families do not relocate closer to Atlanta or to jobs elsewhere in the metro area. They move across a newly expanded four-lane road to the adjacent northern county, Forsyth, a stones throw from their former domiciles.
I ask our neighbors, point blank, why they are moving.
Noras good at math. There are too many kids here good at math. Theyre affecting her self-esteem.
Asian parents take their kids for extra tutoring. Its not fair for the regular kids.
The high school is too competitive. My kids wont get into a good college because of all of the Asians.
I want my children to grow up in the real world. This is not the real world.
In a decade, the white population at our local elementary school plummets from 397 to 195 white students, or from 55 percent to 23 percent of the total student body. Our children lose some of their dearest friends. Our Parent Teacher Association loses valuable leadership. The local middle and high schools tell a similar story. When the subdivisions in our community first opened, white families were among the first to move in. They are among the first to move out, leaving behind brand new homes they built themselves, the paint barely dry.
Sociologist Samuel H. Kye, the author of Segregation in Suburbia: Ethnoburbs and Spatial Attainment in the Urban Periphery, examined segregation patterns in 150 middle class metropolitan black, Hispanic, and Asian ethnoburbs from 1990 to 2010. By focusing on middle-class, as opposed to lower-class ethnoburbs, he hoped to eliminate poverty as a factor for white flight. In a phone interview, he relays that the relative economic prosperity of an ethnoburb does not diminish white peoples decisions to abandon it. Across the board, any time you see a significant presence of minority residents, there is a near perfect predictor of exodus of white residents, he says.
While the term model minority substantiates a myth about how whites value Asians, Asians are only model minorities when they are small in number with minimal influence on a community. When Asians set the norms of academic achievement by which whites are evaluated [and] ultimately usurp those previously in place, once heralded Asian achievements are critiqued with suspicion. In a school district near Princeton, New Jersey, last December, parents claimed that the academic tutoring Asian students received outside of school resulted in the elementary school curriculum being sped up to accommodate them.
These attitudes arent antiquated relics; these beliefs are permeating communities even now. In a 2013 study consisting of a series of interviews with both parents and children in Cupertino, one white mother expressed her concerns about the largely Asian high school:
Looking again at a lot of this as a parent, even though I grew up here, we dont want our kids to go to the high school that were zoned for which is an excellent school. It produces amazing graduates. All of this stuff over there thats, again, left out of a whole piece of the development of the child. So we want our kids to go to [another high school], which is right over the bridge here . But to track our kids for the right schools that arent so over the top with kind of just a real risky, negative approach to success  we dont want our kid to be in that.
Kye suspects the media plays a role in white peoples belief in stereotypes about Asian parenting, particularly its recent fixation on the Asian Tiger Mom. The term competition becomes a racial code for the tensions that develop between whites and Asians when Asians succeed, he says. He speculates that, although the U.S. will become a minority-majority country in a few decades, these trends of segregation and white flight from ethnoburbs will persist for some time. Segregation has historically been part of the fabric of America, Kye says.
Historically, residential segregation has occurred within cities with individual racial communities divided by parks, roads, or other landscape markers. This type of intra-city segregation has been decreasing in recent years in favor of a new strain of segregation that occurs outside of city centers: segregation between suburbs.
For several of the largest cities in the U.S., ethnic minorities now make up the majority suburban population. In 1980, 1.2 million Asians, just under 5 million Hispanics and 6 million blacks lived in the suburbs. Today, 8.3 million Asians, 23 million Hispanics, and 16 million blacks live in the suburbs. This trend of increasing diversity is surging through the suburbs of Atlanta as well. Gwinnett and Cobb counties have more racial diversity than most of the City of Atlanta. Johns Creek, in the northeast corner of Fulton County, still has a majority white population of 60 percent, with 23 percent Asians, according to the most recent census in 2010. Twenty-five percent of the population in Johns Creek is foreign-born.
The white parents in Johns Creek, who in the same breath decry the police killings of unarmed African Americans, do not hesitate to tell me they do not want their children measured against Asians during the critical four years of grades that will make up the bulk of college application materials. This white fragility informs their decisions to insulate themselves from the racial stress of living next to Asians by moving to a different suburb.
Somehow white parents liberal politics and progressivism do not inform them that the decision to relocate to avoid Asians is racism. Theyve defined the term so narrowly, their own individual acts of prejudice dont meet it.
A lot more i encourage people read this. I know how many of us kind of talk about racism at purely a white and black level, but i found it interesting(no shocked) that no matter the success level of the minority there is a level of racism and bias even with the poorly called "model minority" where many people say how if they can succeed why cant other minorities etc but again this is a great example of it not mattering how high they go. They all face racism.
https://psmag.com/ghosts-of-white-p...om-an-asian-ethnoburb-b550ba986cdb#.y0icoq7uw