Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It should get better with the current generation, given the large amount of resources the DC government has poured into public pool over the last 15 years.
But in the DC area the pools were some of the first things to be defunded after the White Flight years. All those private, exclusive pool clubs in MD and VA? They were created so the whites wouldn't have to mix at the pool with poor POC.
It all goes back to money as a proxy for racism. Amazing, right?
About this time last year, I posted asking if anyone could recommend a private swim club in MD that was relatively racially diverse. It didn't go particularly well.
Anonymous wrote:I think OP is using Black and PoC interchangeably here and really shouldn't be.
. . .
Anonymous wrote:It should get better with the current generation, given the large amount of resources the DC government has poured into public pool over the last 15 years.
But in the DC area the pools were some of the first things to be defunded after the White Flight years. All those private, exclusive pool clubs in MD and VA? They were created so the whites wouldn't have to mix at the pool with poor POC.
It all goes back to money as a proxy for racism. Amazing, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm curious why start a new thread? This is easy to google.
-b/c it involves a separate issue from the morality/decency of what these specific young people did/failed to do to that poor drowning man. And it was distracting from the other thread.
PP here. I was asking more from the point of, what is your point in discussing further? Yes, it's known that at least two thirds of AAs can't swim--this is an easily found statistic. The reasons why this is the case are also easy to google. Do you just want personal anecdotes? I could see this sort of devolving into an anonymous place to deride many POC who never learned to swim for reasons related to discrimination and unequal access.
Anonymous wrote:Given the newly-added citations, I don't doubt the statistic.
Should swimming be taught in every public school and be mandatory?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm curious why start a new thread? This is easy to google.
-b/c it involves a separate issue from the morality/decency of what these specific young people did/failed to do to that poor drowning man. And it was distracting from the other thread.