Well, you'd better not be thinking what I think you're thinking, because my answer is the same as always — no threesomes unless it's boy-boy-girl. Or Charlize Theron.

Harmony ,'First Date'


Natter 64: Yes, we still need you  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


§ ita § - Aug 19, 2009 4:52:19 am PDT #4516 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

boy howdy, are the 'burbs around Detroit segregated

Most segregated area in the US according to a study done a few years ago. You just hop from pocket to pocket of ethnicity, with barely a hint that each exists beyond any given border. Can make for some severe whiplash. And I get the impression that folk don't travel that much, from some of the stares I got.


Gudanov - Aug 19, 2009 5:01:07 am PDT #4517 of 30001
Coding and Sleeping

There's a very low level of ethnic diversity in my life. We used to live a majority black neighbor hood until the kids came along, but the extremely high crime rate and horrific schools (unaccredited, school board disbanded and taken over by the state, shootings at the high school bad) and smallness of house drove us to move. It gave me a an appreciation for structural discrimination. Kids growing up there would have severe disadvantages.


Gudanov - Aug 19, 2009 5:03:21 am PDT #4518 of 30001
Coding and Sleeping

Kansas City is pretty segregated too. You can have that odd effect of everybody being black, traveling a couple blocks and suddenly everybody is white.


Aims - Aug 19, 2009 5:05:11 am PDT #4519 of 30001
Shit's all sorts of different now.

But she lives in the 'burbs, and boy howdy, are the 'burbs around Detroit segregated.

I was pretty much born and raised in this part of Michigan and the segregation STILL freaks me out. My Detroit "burb" is pretty diverse, though not as diverse as I once thought once I looked at census data awhile ago. I would have said, and did say, that I thought my town was about 50/50 African American and Caucasian, with some Hispanic and Asian. Turns out, a lot more white folks than I perceived. Which, turned me for a loop for a long time.


Tom Scola - Aug 19, 2009 5:11:58 am PDT #4520 of 30001
Remember that the frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere. And even the smallest act of insurrection pushes our lines forward.

Huh. Björk is going to be living about two blocks away from me: [link]


Sophia Brooks - Aug 19, 2009 5:17:02 am PDT #4521 of 30001
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

In my town in upstate NY, there were boatloads of people of Italian descent, and so many Catholics that they actually left school early on Tuesdays for Religious Education and there would only be a few people left.

However, I can count the number of non-white families on one hand, and that includes a non-practicing Jewish family, 2 multi-race families, a family of Laotion immigrants sponsored by a church group, and a family who had Black foster children.

And where I went to college, it was so white that my best friend and I felt out of place as dark haired, light skinned Italians. Everyone looked like the Hitler Youth.


brenda m - Aug 19, 2009 5:17:31 am PDT #4522 of 30001
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

But she lives in the 'burbs, and boy howdy, are the 'burbs around Detroit segregated. I've never seen a non-white person in her neighborhood, at her church, or in the nearby grocery store. And she's not in a particularly wealthy area—just really, really white.

Milwaukee's a lot like that.


Vortex - Aug 19, 2009 5:51:40 am PDT #4523 of 30001
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

By the same token it can get really old when you're the racial education task force again.

amen.

I've never seen a non-white person in her neighborhood, at her church, or in the nearby grocery store. And she's not in a particularly wealthy area—just really, really white.

Maybe it's just because I live in DC, but wealthy does not always equal white around here.

It gave me a an appreciation for structural discrimination.

what exactly is that and why can you appreciate it?


flea - Aug 19, 2009 5:53:21 am PDT #4524 of 30001
information libertarian

racial education task force

When I lived in Cincinnati, there was a wickedly funny and sometimes deep column in the city paper called Your Negro Tour Guide (by a black woman, natch.)


Gudanov - Aug 19, 2009 6:00:25 am PDT #4525 of 30001
Coding and Sleeping

what exactly is that and why can you appreciate it?

People are stuck in neighborhoods with terrible schools and don't have the opportunities of people who can move out. I understand it happens, but I can appreciate it because I was living right there in the midst. The kids in those neighborhoods are going to go to schools that are run more like political footballs than places of education. I didn't live it because I had the financial means to move out when it became an actual issue, but I got a glimpse.