According
to the United States Census, 79,499 people resided in Scioto County
in 2010. Estimates in 2019 from census.gov put that total at 75,314.
The Black
or African-American percentage of that population
was 2.7% or 1,246 people.
According
to Data USA, in 2017, there were 33.9 times more White (Non-Hispanic)
residents (71.8k people) in Scioto County, Ohio, than any other race
or ethnicity.
I share this data for the
edification of people residing in Scioto County. I believe this
information not only gives insight into the racial makeup of the
county, but also provides proof on how our population differs from
that of most of America.
As Whites in Scioto County
evaluate important issues such as police brutality on Blacks,
systematic racism, and the impact of Black Lives Matter, I hear most
say they understand the reality of the racial unrest and believe they
are certainly not racists and are fully capable of understanding the
problems faced by minorities.
I do believe most of these
people are not prejudiced in explicit terms, but many of them still
fall prey to aversive racism – unconscious (implicit) influences on
how people think about, feel about, and behave toward others based on
group membership.
Aversive racists’
reactions typically involve discomfort, anxiety, or fear. In
America, Whites have been able to change their minds about racism
faster than they have been able to change their deep-seated, and
often unconscious, feelings. In an overly predominate White Scioto
County, being an aversive racist is certainly a danger.
Of course, many white
residents here have Black friends, and they work and socially
associate with members of minorities. In doing so, they see
themselves as being diverse and open to matters of racial disparity.
I hear many say, “I have black friends. I am, therefore,
colorblind.” And, no doubt, they most certainly do have these
people as friends and view themselves as free from racial prejudice.
But … let's get back to
that perception and confront reality. How many of these same Scioto
County Whites live next to Black families? In actuality, how many
Whites live in school districts where more than handful of Black
students are enrolled? How many of them belong to social groups or
organizations with sizable Black memberships?
Consider
the question of integrated schools. Public School Review reports the
Portsmouth City School District (school year 2020) has a minority
enrollment of 26% of the student body (majority Black and Hispanic),
which is actually less than the Ohio public school average of 30%
(majority Black). Anyone who has lived here for even a short time
knows Portsmouth Schools educate the majority of Black students in
Scioto County.
The census.gov
estimate of 2019 reports 20,158 people live in Portsmouth, 5.7% of
which are Black or African-American. That means 1,149 Blacks live
within the city limits. And that also means a whopping 97 Blacks live
in Scioto County outside of Portsmouth. To me, these statistics are
very revealing. There is little, almost no, diversity in rural Scioto
County.
The estimated population
of the United States is 328,239,523 of which the census reports 13.4%
are Black or African-American. It is evident with national
percentages at 13.4% and county percentages at 2.7%, the chances of
even having everyday interaction with Blacks here is far lower than
any kind of American average – five times lower than a projected
normal, in fact.
How much of this racial
isolation is self-imposed as opposed to forced? Racial and
socioeconomic segregation are closely linked - if you're a black
person in America, you're more likely than a white person to live in
an area of concentrated poverty. This isn't simply a matter of
choice, or chance. Pew Research reports even though overall racial and
ethnic inequality in wealth narrowed from 2013 to 2016, the gap
remains large. In 2016, the median wealth of white households was
$171,000. That’s 10 times the wealth of black households ($17,100).
Do Blacks live in
self-imposed segregation for purposes of self defense and protection?
After all many white neighborhoods have reputations for intolerance
and prejudice. Even in less-hostile territory, African Americans
find the prospect of being constantly judged by white neighbors –
and having to be on their best behavior to disprove white stereotypes
– tiresome.
Gregory Smithsimon –
associate professor of sociology at Brooklyn College, City University
of New York, and the CUNY Graduate Center – says one
Washington-area resident said …
“I really wasn’t
interested in moving into an all-white neighborhood and being the
only black pioneer down there. I don’t want to come home and always
have my guard up. After I work eight hours or more a day, I don’t
want to come home and work another eight.”
(Gregory Smithsimon.
“Are African American families more vulnerable in a largely white
neighborhood?” The Guardian. February 21, 2018.)
On the other hand, social
scientists Douglas Massey and Nancy Denton contradict the idea that
people like to live with their “own kind” in their landmark study
of racial segregation, “American Apartheid.” They found Blacks
don’t express a preference to be as segregated as they are: in
surveys, the largest percentage of African Americans want to live in
neighborhoods that are a 50-50 mix of black and white people. But few
such neighborhoods exist, and almost none stay mixed for long.
So, to those numbers, I
hear Whites say, “That is the way it is. I didn't have anything to
do with the lack of diversity in the population. I can't change
that.”
While acknowledging lack
of blame, Whites might be well informed to look at the past. Scioto
County has a long history of being a bordering slave state, a state
where Southern sympathies run deep and both Black Laws intended to
restrict the rights of free blacks and de facto
discrimination have deep roots.
You may remember what is
commonly known as Black Friday on January 21st, 1831, and the
expulsion of eighty Black residents of Portsmouth. They were then
expelled under the threat of enforcement of the Ohio "Black
Laws” of the early 1800s. The local paper, The
Portsmouth Courier, even printed a notice at
the time: “The citizens of
Portsmouth are adopting measures to free the town of its colored
population.” The refugees were runaway
slaves and their locally born sons and daughters, who for whatever
reason, decided to stay in Portsmouth rather than seek freedom in
Canada.
History
tells sobering truths. The story of the integration of Dreamland Pool
is well documented as is the fact that Portsmouth High enforced
separate proms until 1954. Since then, we White residents of the
county have traditionally been stubborn to change, and now much of
that attitude is aversive in nature. Whites prefer to allow
advancements and grant privileges to minorities – they often
bristle when these minorities invoke the reins and demand due
equality and justice.
The simple
point I make is that it is extremely difficult to actually know the
heart and minds of Blacks in Scioto County when they do not live
“with”
you, but instead, they live in very small numbers “around”
you. This is a fact we White residents should not ignore as we tackle
the reality of what it means to be Black in America. Almost all
Whites in Scioto County do not even know what it means to live in a
neighborhood with a significant Black population. How in the world
can we properly judge the issues at hand in 2020 unless we listen to
Black voices and be receptive to their messages.
I'll close
with this delineation. Being “attuned,” being “sympathetic,”
or even being “empathetic” is not the same as being “involved”
and being “active.” The challenge we Whites in this county face
is to uncover our own lack of experience with diversity, ask
ourselves how we have contributed to these conditions, and then work
to evoke needed changes to embrace our minorities. It is not an issue
of “race”
-- that is a manufactured term as you realize there is more genetic
diversity within a so-called “race” than between two races.
Rather, it is an issue of racism ... the kind that still haunts the
communities of 2020 America.
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