keadaan obama yang item memang menjadi kendala dalam pemilihan 
presiden amerika.  kalo, obama kulit putih, udah jelas, obama akan 
menang tanpa kesulitan.  kalo calon gop berumur 50-an, ada 
kemungkinan obama juga bakalan kalah.  ini disebabkan karena 
rasialisme masih subur di amerika.

padahal obama bukan keturunan budak amerika.  keluarga ibunya adalah 
keluarga 'darah biru kansas, yang masih satu keturunan dengan dick 
chenney.  beda lah attitude obama dibandingakan dengan negro amerika 
keturunan budak seperti jesse jackson yang 'lack of attitude'.

oot, seperti omongan leo, suryana, dan jasad tentang harga rumah di 
amerika.  kalo lokasi 'white neighborhood' udah pasti harganya mahal 
dan stabil, kalo lokasinya 50:50 antara item dan putih, harganya bisa 
murah.  kalo lokasinya 'black neighborhood', udah pasti ancur lah.  
nggak peduli di suburb atau hill.

seperti pernah kejadian di seattlle, ada perumahan daerah elit di 
pulau dekat seattle, yang masyarakatnya mengajukan petisi menolak 
negro, ketika ada negro yang mau beli properti di daerah tersebut.  
karena jika negro masuk kesana, harga propertinya sudah pasti akan 
turun.  makanya, daerah kulit putih, seperti oregon state, washington 
state, harga rumah cuman turun antara 5-10%, dibandingkan di midwest 
yang turun sampai 30%.




=======



Blacks, whites show prejudices along racial divide 

By RON FOURNIER and ERRIN HAINES 
Associated Press Writers
 
 
DETROIT (AP) -- The Classic Creations barber shop sits empty, 
surrounded by drunks and shuttered storefronts just two blocks from 
the manicured lawns of Grosse Pointe Park. The contrast isn't lost on 
LaVar Anthony, a young barber who speaks in riddles of race, class 
and politics.

"What's already understood," he says without looking up from his 
Ebony magazine, "don't need to be explained."

But when it comes to race, what is understood? And what is 
misunderstood?

And how can it be that in 2008 - 143 years after slavery was 
abolished, decades after the civil rights movement - an AP-Yahoo News 
poll could find that racial misgivings could cost Sen. Barack Obama 
the election?

In search of explanations, two Associated Press reporters - one 
black, one white - listened to people of both races along Detroit's 
divides: Alter Road, which separates the city from the tony Grosse 
Pointes near Lake St. Clair, and 8 Mile Road, the vast northern 
border between a mostly black Detroit and its mostly white suburbs.

They found people of both races living just blocks apart who 
nonetheless spoke of each other like strangers. There was suspicion, 
contempt - and yet, for many, a desperate hope that Obama's candidacy 
might be the final step in America's long path to racial equality. 
For whites, their support of Democratic economic policies forces them 
to confront their racial prejudices.

It is here you meet decent people with much in common - both sides of 
8 Mile Road are populated by blue-collar Democratic families. But 
many still can't get past their racial differences.

Whites say their neighbors consider blacks to be violent and solely 
responsible for problems in the black community.

Blacks say many of their own consider whites to be spoiled and 
condescending.

But nobody - well, hardly anybody - acknowledged their own 
prejudices. Both blacks and whites instead blamed "they," a vague and 
unaccountable surrogate for their own racial attitudes.

"They" are whites who say Obama is unqualified when they really mean 
he's black.

"They" are blacks who say all whites are bigots.

Anthony knows who "they" are.

"It's understood that there's still a lot of racism that goes on out 
there," the barber says with a nod out his window and a wisdom beyond 
his 30 years. "A lot of white people look down on blacks as being 
lazy or whatever."

Perched on a ragged leather barber chair closest to the door, his 
knees pulled to his chest, Anthony fixes his gaze on a white 
journalist visiting his shop. "The stereotype against whites is that 
they have all the advantages," he says. "They all look down on us. 
They're snobs."

---

Four of every 10 white Americans hold at least a partly negative view 
toward blacks, calling them "lazy," or "violent" or blaming them for 
the ills of black America, according to the AP-Yahoo poll. Such 
surveys draw criticism from whites who say the numbers are 
exaggerated and from blacks who say the numbers are too low.

Let others argue about the math. Listen while the people of Detroit 
explain.

"My kids have been called nigger babies. ... That was from a white 
family," says Cherlonda Hampton, a black woman shopping at an outdoor 
mall on 8 Mile Road.

A petite mother of nine who looks half her 37 years, Hampton says she 
was harassed by whites while living in suburban Detroit. Feces were 
smeared on her car. A dead bird was left on a tire. When her child 
was bitten by a white classmate, the white principal didn't seem to 
care.

After a year, Hampton returned to her segregated Detroit neighborhood.

This is an apt place to talk about race in America. Detroit's 
population peaked at nearly 2 million in the 1950s and has been on 
the decline ever since, dropping to less than 1 million in the latest 
Census figures. Although racial tension isn't the only cause, the 
1967 race riots hastened Detroit's decline and mandatory school 
busing a decade later stoked unrest.

Coleman A. Young, the city's first black mayor and a racially 
polarizing figure, said before his 1997 death, "No other city in 
America, no other city in the Western world has lost the population 
at that rate. And what's at the root cause of that loss? Economics 
and race. Or should I say, race and economics?"

White working-class Detroiters fled the city in droves, many to 
Macomb County and its working-class suburbs north of 8 Mile Road. 
Detroit's white-flighters were among the first to be dubbed "Reagan 
Democrats" - socially conservative, economically progressive, mostly 
Catholic voters who abandoned the Democratic Party for the GOP, in 
part because Republicans exploited their racial fears.

Their children and grandchildren are just as politically independent -
 swing voters in a swing county that both Obama and Republican John 
McCain hope to carry en route to winning Michigan.

And, like the Reagan Democrats of a generation ago, whites in Macomb 
County today aren't sure whether to vote their pocketbooks or their 
prejudices.

"I work at a grocery store and I know a lot of people who are not 
going to vote for (Obama) because of the racial thing," says Colleen 
Mullins, a white woman who lives with her husband Daniel in a black 
neighborhood south of 8 Mile Road.

"I'm hoping Obama wins because he's for the middle class," says Mark 
Coccia, 48, outside a suburban post office just north of Detroit. 
He's white, a laid-off factory worker and lifelong Democrat who's 
about to declare bankruptcy.

An American flag cracks in the wind as Coccia explains that he agrees 
with Obama's politics and admires the Illinois Democrat. But Coccia 
can't move beyond race.

"They can't blame the white man," he says of blacks. "Their own color 
sold them into slavery."

Coccia takes a seat at a picnic table and opines that McCain will die 
in office if elected and leave a woman, Sarah Palin, as 
president. "That," he says, "is not right."

Still, he may not back Obama.

"What kind of choice do guys like me have? A black guy or a woman," 
Coccia says. "It's a lesser of two evils."

He laughs, then turns serious - though it is never clear how serious 
he was all along.

"If Obama was a white candidate and gave the same convention speech," 
McCain wouldn't stand a chance. "But people are going to judge by the 
color of his skin."

"Not me, mind you," Coccia hastens to add, "But they will."

There's that pesky "they." You can talk for hours about "they" 
and "them" along 8 Mile Road. Though race relations are nowhere near 
as bad as they were in the 1960s, a white person can live for years 
in the suburbs without ever coming in contact with a black and, 
conversely, a Detroiter can grow up in the city without getting to 
know a white suburbanite.

Here, it's unfamiliarity that can breed contempt - or at least 
misunderstanding.

It would be a mistake to dismiss Coccia as a "bigot" or "redneck." 
Such labels turn him into a cartoon, somehow taking the edge off his 
racial views.

He exists, and so do his views, and they're shared by countless 
blacks and whites.

"They're everywhere," says Scott Flatt, 37, after stopping his bike 
just north of 8 Mile Road in Eastpointe to talk about blacks. "But I 
don't mind blacks as much as some of my neighbors. They're bigots."

Richard Mosely, a 35-year-old engineer working just west of Alter 
Road in Detroit, sets aside his blueprints to discuss the sentiments 
of fellow blacks. "They think whites are punks," he says. "I don't, 
necessarily."

Blacks are more generous in their description of whites than whites 
are of blacks, according to the AP-Yahoo News poll, but the two races 
see racial discrimination in starkly different terms.

When asked "how much discrimination against blacks" exists, just 10 
percent of whites said "a lot" and 45 percent said "some."

Among blacks, 57 percent said "a lot" and all but a fraction of the 
rest said "some."

---

Two blocks from Anthony's barber shop in Detroit, James Turnbull of 
Grosse Pointe Park takes a break from his morning gardening to show 
off his prized blooms to a black journalist. Before long, the 
conversation turns to race, class and politics, subjects the 71-year-
old white man encountered as a young man working in poor, black 
neighborhoods in the Jim Crow South.

While repossessing a family's kitchen appliances, "I would have a, 
pardon the expression, pickanniny on one arm," he recalls.

In one breath, Turnbull politely uses that long-passe pejorative for 
a black child. In the next, he says he's been around black politics 
for a long time and worked for former Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer, 
who is black. He believes the poll results showing white Democrats 
are letting their prejudices affect their vote.

"It does surprise me that they admitted it," he says.

Separated by a short walk - from Anthony's barber shop to Turnbull's 
blooms - are two ways of life: Porsches north of Alter Road, busy bus 
stops to the south; canopied awnings decorating storefronts to the 
north; bars and steel sliding doors protecting shops to south; white 
and black drivers pumping gas across the street from one another at 
unofficially segregated stations.

Not that Turnbull minds. "You live here, you don't see it," he says.

But he does notice a group of young, black men walking west on 
Jefferson, headed out of the Grosse Pointes into Detroit.

"You see them?" he points. "Some folks would look at them and 
say, 'There go three potential gang members. They've got the black do-
rags. Their pants are sagging. They don't look like your neighborhood 
kid here.'"

But to him?

Turnbull wipes the soil from soiled hands and thinks for a minute. "I 
would hope that I would see just a bunch of kids."

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may 
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more 
about our Privacy Policy.

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