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@alphonsomorris793 so why are there still cities to this day dealing with segregation then?? Milwaukee being the most segregated city in the nation
“According to a 2021 report, the most segregated cities in the United States are:
Detroit, Newark, Hialeah, Chicago, Milwaukee, Cleveland, New York City, Miami, and St. Louis
The Midwest, Mid-Atlantic, and West Coast are the most segregated regions, while St. Lucia, Florida and Colorado Springs, Colorado are the only two integrated regions.
Black people are hypersegregated in most of the largest metropolitan areas in the United States, including Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Houston, Los Angeles, New Orleans, New York, Philadelphia, and Washington, DC.
The Milwaukee metro area has the highest levels of Black–White segregation, and the Philadelphia metro area has the highest levels of Hispanic–White segregation
So again how is this not true?? Segregation never left to begin with
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@jakegreen5682 Richmond is so dangerous that LA times knew about us
Los Angeles, the homicide capital of America in 1992 when 1,096 people were killed, has seen a steady decline and by 2004 the city ranked 47th in the nation. The most striking improvement from 1992 to 2004 is around MacArthur Park, west of downtown. Elsewhere in Southern California, some cities’ homicide numbers have gone up, but none have rates that crack the top 10 nationally.
U.S. homicide rates in 2004
Cities over 100,000
-- National rank State Rate* 1 New Orleans La. 56.3 2 Gary Ind. 53.7 3 Richmond Va. 46.3 4 Baltimore Md. 43.5 5 Detroit Mich. 42.1 6 Washington D.C. 35.8 7 Richmond Calif. 33.8 8 St. Louis Mo. 33.7 9 Flint Mich. 32.3 10 Newark N.J. 30.0
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2005-aug-09-la.1.me_commentary.txt3-story.html%3f_amp=true
As of Friday, 414 people had been slain in the city in 1994, down from the 467 homicides that occurred in 1993. The year ended with 780 nonfatal shootings, a reduction of 14% from the previous year. Overall reported crime dropped 8% in the district.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Washington had the highest rate of homicide among major U.S. cities. That is no longer the case. This year, the city’s homicide rate of about 71 slayings for every 100,000 residents places it third behind New Orleans and Richmond, Va., according to statistics provided by the FBI and local police departments.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1994-12-31-mn-14955-story.html%3f_amp=true
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@matrixseven8528 “Going back to 1985, only six big cities have held the dubious distinction of U.S. “murder capital,” as measured on a per capita basis. Besides St. Louis, they include Detroit (six times, most recently in 2013); New Orleans (13 times, most recently in 2011); Birmingham, Alabama (once, in 2005); Washington, D.C. (eight times, most recently in 1999); and Richmond, Virginia (once, in 1997).” Count seven for Detroit because they were Murder capital last year in 2020. These are the cities that had way higher numbers than LA and Chicago even when Chicago was at units height in the early 2010s they still couldn’t compare only thing that these cities didn’t have in common with Chicago is the mass shootings. The crazy part is that Birmingham and Richmond are around between 200k-300k while Detroit, DC and New Orleans are like half million. Detroit used to be in the millions at one point but ppl were leaving cause how broke is there. DC would’ve been in the millions too had Northern Virginia not taking there land specifically areas like Rosslyn, Arlington, Alexandria. New Orleans original population was at 500k but hurricane Katrina happened and also caused Nola to commit their highest murder rate at 94.7
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