Comments on “Study: Blacks lived longer in segregated areas, while whites showed shorter lifespan”

  1. Neptus 9 says:
    09/12/2017 at 3:54 PM

    Of course many black people lived longer segregated during the segregation era. That was one reason for segregation laws — to lessen racial strife.
    Whites lived shorter lives because everybody did till after the middle of the last century. You’re comparing apples to tangerines.

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    1. Jettie Thompson Townsend says:
      09/13/2017 at 10:31 PM

      Actually, the reason for segregation laws was to increase and to perpetuate racial strife. When a person only knows what they have been told by others, or who may have even personally experienced a negative interaction with one or perhaps even a few persons from another demographic or when they listen to someone narrate what a third person has told them about something which their parents or grandparents claimed to have heard or experience, ignorance (which is the basis of prejudice – prejudging based upon suppositions, rather than facts) then that person is incapable of formulating an opinion based upon factual information.

      There are too many variations among individuals, we all have different life experiences, unique experiences – even within families. Therefore, when people fall into the trap of LUMPING EVERY, or even MOST people into categories, they miss out on the richness of humanity which each culture within our world has to offer.

      “White” people lived shorter lives during de jure segregation, for multiple reasons. Racism, being a mental illness, taxes the mental, spiritual and consequently, the physical well being. It takes an extraordinary amount of energy and effort to continue lying to oneself, and collectively as a group, about a contrived superiority based solely upon one’s physiognomy.

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      1. Neptus 9 says:
        09/14/2017 at 12:42 AM

        An interesting take on this is in a book about the Reconstruction era to early 1900s. For some time integration was the rule. The author, whose last name I think is MacArthur, points out that black and white men had interests in common (sports, work, etc.) but generally white women only knew black women as domestic help.
        Though the author says she’s a feminist she credits white women in particular with wanting segregation more than most of the men and getting it enacted. Despite what we hear from some elements, women had political clout. I think the title is “Making the New Woman” or something similar. Sorry, my notes are packed up right now.
        I doubt white people’s lives were overall shorter, but guess black people’s were longer than before.

      2. Jettie Thompson Townsend says:
        09/14/2017 at 12:24 PM

        ImI.searched.high and low for a book with that title, without success. Please send the title once you can acquire it. I’d be interested in reading the book.

      3. Neptus 9 says:
        09/14/2017 at 4:49 PM

        Found! McArthur, Judith N. “Creating the New Woman”: University of Chicago Press, 1998.
        Sorry I don’t have the ISBN number.

        “White women accepted and perpetuated the Jim Crow system, voluntarily segregating their community building projects…” Page 88.

        There are several quotes on that page of notes and I probably have another page from that volume. I went through reams of printouts locating it.
        I needed to, since I’ve cited it a few times. I’ll create a file of my notes one day.
        If you can find the book hopefully you’ll find the rest of what I haven’t yet. I believe I got it from a University of Chicago remnants catalog. Good luck with that.

  2. Survey: 4 In 10 Adult Americans Still Sleep With Teddy Bear - Study Finds says:
    09/13/2017 at 1:57 PM

    […] Study: Blacks Lived Longer In Segregated Areas, While Whites Showed Shorter Lifespan […]

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