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gollygee

(22,336 posts)
10. Another article
Fri Jun 19, 2015, 09:18 AM
Jun 2015
http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/03/millenials-race-115909.html

News about race in America these days is almost universally negative. Longstanding wealth, income and employment gaps between whites and people of color are increasing, and tensions between police and minority communities around the country are on the rise. But many claim there’s a glimmer of hope: The next generation of Americans, they say, is “post-racial”—more tolerant, and therefore more capable of easing these race-based inequities. Unfortunately, closer examination of the data suggests that millennials aren’t racially tolerant, they’re racially apathetic: They simply ignore structural racism rather than try to fix it.

In 2010, a Pew Research report trumpeted that “the younger generation is more racially tolerant than their elders.” In the Chicago Tribune, Ted Gregory seized on this to declare millennials “the most tolerant generation in history.” These types of arguments typically cling to the fact that young people are more likely than their elders to favor interracial marriage. But while millennials are indeed less likely than baby boomers to say that more people of different races marrying each other is a change for the worse (6 percent compared to 14 percent), their opinions on that score are basically no different than those of the generation immediately before them, the Gen Xers, who come in at 5 percent. On interracial dating, the trend is similar, with 92 percent of Gen Xers saying it’s “all right for blacks and whites to date each other,” compared to 93 percent of millennials.

Furthermore, these questions don’t really say anything about racial justice: After all, interracial dating and marriage are unlikely to solve deep disparities in criminal justice, wealth, upward mobility, poverty and education—at least not in this century. (Black-white marriages currently make up just 2.2 percent of all marriages.) And when it comes to opinions on more structural issues, such as the role of government in solving social and economic inequality and the need for continued progress, millennials start to split along racial lines. When people are asked, for example, “How much needs to be done in order to achieve Martin Luther King’s dream of racial equality?” the gap between white millennials and millennials of color (all those who don’t identify as white) are wide. And once again, millennials are shown to be no more progressive than older generations: Among millennials, 42 percent of whites answer that “a lot” must be done to achieve racial equality, compared to 41 percent of white Gen Xers and 44 percent of white boomers.

(snip)

In a 2009 study using American National Election Studies—a survey of Americans before and after each presidential election—Vincent Hutchings finds, “younger cohorts of Whites are no more racially liberal in 2008 than they were in 1988.” My own analysis of the most recent data reveals a similar pattern: Gaps between young whites and old whites on support for programs that aim to further racial equality are very small compared to the gaps between young whites and young blacks.


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Painting with a really broad brush Kelvin Mace Jun 2015 #1
It isn't about all millenials gollygee Jun 2015 #2
I would argue that they definitely are better when it comes to tolerance and judgmentalism..... marmar Jun 2015 #5
What I've read is that the level of racism is about the same but it looks different gollygee Jun 2015 #8
Agreed. trotsky Jun 2015 #15
It's based on a study, not this one person gollygee Jun 2015 #17
Today's millenials ARE more tolerant than their parents... SidDithers Jun 2015 #3
This has been studied gollygee Jun 2015 #4
That doesn't match data I have seen. yardwork Jun 2015 #7
There is data in the linked article gollygee Jun 2015 #9
Another article gollygee Jun 2015 #10
That study is more a reflection of their perceptions of racism as a problem. B2G Jun 2015 #11
It's a bit about both gollygee Jun 2015 #12
Exactly. yardwork Jun 2015 #6
Millennials were born into and live in a racist society. How can they not be racist? Brickbat Jun 2015 #13
Yeah gollygee Jun 2015 #14
I wonder though, they were born into a homophobic society too but aren't homophobic riderinthestorm Jun 2015 #19
Lack of economic opportunity and right wing politicians pandering to their base notadmblnd Jun 2015 #16
I'm posting a link to the actual study gollygee Jun 2015 #18
"Waiting for all of the old racists to die off" may very well happen someday, but it bullwinkle428 Jun 2015 #20
Roof doesn't represent millennials any more than ISIS LittleBlue Jun 2015 #21
It is using him to illustrate information from a study gollygee Jun 2015 #22
thank you marions ghost Jun 2015 #23
kick gollygee Jun 2015 #24
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