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Home Front: Culture Wars |
Being white, and a minority, in Georgia |
2016-09-11 |
It used to direct residents to a fast food franchise, a beacon of Americana, where a hamburger cost 79 cents. The building is gone now. Only the sign remains, and at its base is a Hispanic man with a machete, slicing open coconuts piled in the back of his trailer. His English is shaky. His coconuts cost $4. A generation ago, this Atlanta suburb was 95 percent white and rural with one little African-American neighborhood that was known as "colored town.’’ But after a tidal wave of Hispanic and Asian immigrants who were attracted to Norcross by cheap housing and proximity to a booming job market, white people now make up less than 20 percent of the population in Norcross and surrounding neighborhoods. It’s a shift so rapid that many of the longtime residents feel utterly disconnected from the place where they raised their children. "It’s not that much anger, but you don’t feel comfortable knowing that all this is around you," said Billy Weathers, 79, who has lived in the area for his whole life and doesn’t speak a lick of Spanish. |
Posted by:Besoeker |
#2 What happened to African-Americans? |
Posted by: g(r)omgoru 2016-09-11 15:29 |
#1 A fine read. |
Posted by: Skidmark 2016-09-11 08:31 |