Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one would call a crayon box with only three crayons diverse, you know what I mean.
Yes exactly.
Especially if the white crayon insists that the brown and red and yellow crayons assimilate to "fit in" and prohibit them from expressing their individual culturally identifying hues.
That's definitely not diversity when everybody's the same just darker versions of white people.
Anonymous wrote:No one would call a crayon box with only three crayons diverse, you know what I mean.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are all the minorities in my suburb? Im in Burke and my entire street is white and so is everyone else I have met from the neighborhood. I’m a minority so just wondering - newish to the area but I thought DMV was known for diversity. I do remember seeing a lot more diversity when we lived in Springfield briefly.
The District and Maryland (DM) part of the DMV is diverse. The Virginia (V) part, not so much.
Yawn. Another post where someone from DC or MD tries to school us that diversity can only mean one thing: Black.
Where in that post it says diversity can only mean Black?
Your post says more about yourself.
Fairfax County has twice as many native speakers of foreign languages as DC and many more Spanish speakers specifically. You may just have found a very small white community. It is not true for Ffx county overall. The poster upthread who says Virginia is not diverse is wrong.
I know, it's the new vogue :"international diversity ", meaning the right kind of people. Wink, wink.
Anonymous wrote:Whether there is or isn't "white flight" won't really matter long term when it comes to DC. The city is way too small to absorb massive amounts of people from VA and MD. We're not talking Chicago or NYC here. DC doesn't have the infrastructure and land mass to take on that kind of density. Plus the way prices are spiking there will always be a majority of white families who simply can't afford to to live in the District. I could see DC becoming 75% white in the next 25 years, losing much of its diversity. But that won't mean the suburbs are emptying out of white families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t help but think that all the fear I hear on this board can be allayed by people just mixing more, even intermarrying. It’s happening, Which gives me hope. I think people of similar income backgrounds and education get along well regardless of race or even religion. You have a lot more in common with your neighbors than you think. Even your fear of each other is somewhat mutual. Someone has to break the ice, ask the other to the dance. “Come on people now, smile on your brother, everybody get together try to love one another right now.”
That is certainly true in McLean, where educated professional whites, Asians, Arabs and Indians are all happily enjoying their expensive houses, well groomed parks and great schools. Seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are all the minorities in my suburb? Im in Burke and my entire street is white and so is everyone else I have met from the neighborhood. I’m a minority so just wondering - newish to the area but I thought DMV was known for diversity. I do remember seeing a lot more diversity when we lived in Springfield briefly.
The District and Maryland (DM) part of the DMV is diverse. The Virginia (V) part, not so much.
Yawn. Another post where someone from DC or MD tries to school us that diversity can only mean one thing: Black.
Where in that post it says diversity can only mean Black?
Your post says more about yourself.
Fairfax County has twice as many native speakers of foreign languages as DC and many more Spanish speakers specifically. You may just have found a very small white community. It is not true for Ffx county overall. The poster upthread who says Virginia is not diverse is wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are all the minorities in my suburb? Im in Burke and my entire street is white and so is everyone else I have met from the neighborhood. I’m a minority so just wondering - newish to the area but I thought DMV was known for diversity. I do remember seeing a lot more diversity when we lived in Springfield briefly.
The District and Maryland (DM) part of the DMV is diverse. The Virginia (V) part, not so much.
Yawn. Another post where someone from DC or MD tries to school us that diversity can only mean one thing: Black.
Where in that post it says diversity can only mean Black?
Your post says more about yourself.
There's a lot of diversity in NOVA. But it's Asian and Hispanic and Middle Eastern and Indian.
Whenever people complain there isn't enough diversity in NOVA they're really saying there aren't enough black people. They don't care about the rest of the diverse populations that live in NOVA. Even I know this.
Come on. Are there really more than a handful of Latinx families in these neighborhoods in NoVa?
An area with lots of Asian and Arab and white families--but with few Latinx or African American families--I'd describe as just "okay" for diversity. I'd say they have some, but I woouldn't describe it as very diverse if it has very few of the two largest ethnic minority groups in the country.
Apart from Langley, every high school pyramid in FCPS (as well as in APS and ACPS) is at least 10% Hispanic. All are majority-minority school systems. DC and PG are less diverse with their large majorities of one group in most of their schools.
School boundaries are designed to have at least some diversity. Notice that I asked about neighborhoods, not schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reaction to seeing non-whites moving in
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Try telling that to pretty much all the DC suburbs. Good luck because the stats don't bear you out.
Check the stats in 5 years.
While the panic is very much real it does take some time to pack up and move ya know.
Anonymous wrote:Anyway, hasn't anyone commented that white people are taking over formerly black neighborhoods in the district itself?
There's a sight difference.
The residents of formerly black neighborhoods didn't panic and evacuate.
More often than not they were displaced due to eviction, increased rent, housing expenses, or displacement by private action.
If you had rents raised or evicted, you aren't really a resident, really more of a transient tenant. Owners have a stake in the community, renters are just consumers.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reaction to seeing non-whites moving in
![]()
Try telling that to pretty much all the DC suburbs. Good luck because the stats don't bear you out.
Check the stats in 5 years.
While the panic is very much real it does take some time to pack up and move ya know.
Anonymous wrote:Anyway, hasn't anyone commented that white people are taking over formerly black neighborhoods in the district itself?
There's a sight difference.
The residents of formerly black neighborhoods didn't panic and evacuate.
More often than not they were displaced due to eviction, increased rent, housing expenses, or displacement by private action.
Anonymous wrote:Reaction to seeing non-whites moving in
![]()
Try telling that to pretty much all the DC suburbs. Good luck because the stats don't bear you out.
Anonymous wrote:Anyway, hasn't anyone commented that white people are taking over formerly black neighborhoods in the district itself?
Anonymous wrote:Reaction to seeing non-whites moving in

Anonymous wrote:I can’t help but think that all the fear I hear on this board can be allayed by people just mixing more, even intermarrying. It’s happening, Which gives me hope. I think people of similar income backgrounds and education get along well regardless of race or even religion. You have a lot more in common with your neighbors than you think. Even your fear of each other is somewhat mutual. Someone has to break the ice, ask the other to the dance. “Come on people now, smile on your brother, everybody get together try to love one another right now.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are all the minorities in my suburb? Im in Burke and my entire street is white and so is everyone else I have met from the neighborhood. I’m a minority so just wondering - newish to the area but I thought DMV was known for diversity. I do remember seeing a lot more diversity when we lived in Springfield briefly.
The District and Maryland (DM) part of the DMV is diverse. The Virginia (V) part, not so much.
Yawn. Another post where someone from DC or MD tries to school us that diversity can only mean one thing: Black.
Where in that post it says diversity can only mean Black?
Your post says more about yourself.