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inside an all white community in arkansas

After getting Martha's Vineyard confused with Nantucket, @Trausti continues to emphasize his ignorance of Martha's Vineyard:
It's so funny you pretend like the liberals of Martha's Vineyard wanted them, when they were happy to see them board the buses and leave. All those big houses, but no space for diversity.
Quoting Wikipedia:
In contrast to the seasonal influx of wealthy visitors, Dukes County remains one of the poorest in the state.
The historic presence of African-American residents in Oak Bluffs resulted in its Town Beach being pejoratively called "The Inkwell", a nickname which was reappropriated as an emblem of pride.
Since the 19th century, the island has had a sizable community of Portuguese-Americans, concentrated primarily in the three down-Island towns of Oak Bluffs, Tisbury, and Edgartown; they have traditionally worked alongside other island residents in whaling and fishing. It also has a large community of Brazilian immigrants who work mainly in the maintenance of the island's vacation facilities.
The year-round working population of Martha's Vineyard earns 30 percent less on average than other residents of the state while keeping up with a cost of living that is 60 percent higher than average.
 
After getting Martha's Vineyard confused with Nantucket, @Trausti continues to emphasize his ignorance of Martha's Vineyard:

Quoting Wikipedia:
"This section is written like a personal reflection, personal essay, or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor's personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic."
 
But you're not denying they're a bunch of progressives who didn't want to make room for DeSantis's travelers?
If @Trausti were truly interested in learning about the islanders' response, he could read about it in the Vineyard Gazette's account.

As explained by Oak Bluffs fire chief Nelson Wirtz, who served as chair of Dukes County Emergency Services:
Chief Wirtz said the shelter at St. Andrew’s was always intended to be temporary, but provided much-needed resources like beds, plumbing and a shower.

“We knew we were going to need resources beyond what the Island could provide,” he said.
Within days, the islanders raised almost $300,000 in support of those who were duped into boarding the flight to Martha's Vineyard. (To assist those whose mathematical skills allow them to swallow the lie that drug prices have been reduced by 400 to 500%, that's about $6000 per migrant.)

In the days since the migrants’ departure from the Vineyard, many involved in the response have received negative phone calls, emails and messages on social media. This week, a plane dragging a banner that read “Vineyard Hypocrites” circled the Island.

“The negative comments are coming from people who don’t have any knowledge of what the situation was on the ground,” Chief Wirtz said. “My job … is to take care of the people that are in front of me.”
It is fair to assume @Trausti has been getting his misinformation from similarly ignorant off-islanders.

The migrants are free to leave the Joint Base whenever they please, state officials told the Gazette. Some have already headed to New York, and some have plans to connect with resources in places across the country. For others, a new home could emerge in a region the migrants never intended to visit.
It is my understanding that about four of them are now residents of Martha's Vineyard, but most have settled in parts of Massachusetts (and other northeastern states) where the cost of living is less than on the island.

Just one week after the incident, a class action lawsuit was filed against Ron DeSantis and others. On 29 March 2024, DeSantis and the other individuals were dismissed as defendants, without prejudice, primarily (as it appears to me; IANAL) for the court's lack of personal jurisdiction. Vertol remains a defendant, and the next hearing appears to be scheduled for April 2026.
 
"This section is written like a personal reflection, personal essay, or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor's personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic."
Martha's Vineyard Statistical Profile 2023

For those whose attention span falls short of 150 pages, here is a much shorter preview from 2021:
Census Shows Vineyard Population Has Grown, Diversified

Those who prefer a breezier account of the island's history, sort of a personal essay whose facts can easily be checked, might enjoy A Brief But Comprehensive History of Martha's Vineyard.

ETA: Quoting from the concluding paragraph of that personal essay:
Here’s a fun fact that will surprise you and win you points at cocktail parties: Dukes County (i.e., Martha’s Vineyard) was the poorest county in Massachusetts in 1980, and today remains among the poorer counties. The summer folk with their sumptuous homes brought a lot of money to the Island while their homes were being built, and the vibrant tourist industry keeps money coming in for a good four or five months of the year, but the rest of the time, this is a largely blue-collar community. What makes it special and endearing is that so many of the “regular Joes and Jills” who struggle to make ends meet through the winter are here by choice, because they are drawn to the same things that the celebrities are drawn to, that the writers and painters of the past hundred years have been drawn to. They are willing to do whatever they need to remain here, taking whatever work they can, including writing up summary histories of their beloved homeland for a local newspaper’s website.
 
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the most fascinating part of the video to me was when you ask actual, undeniable racists a question about their views and just let them talk uninterrupted how ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ stupid they sound. it gets old after a while, but yeah that was what initially drew me into the video.
 
Yet somehow they affiliate with their own kind as they get older. No one tells them to do that.
Yes they do. Not verbally out loud, perhaps, but kids imitate what they see. If they see adults self-segregating, then they will self-segregate. As they have for generations in America back to when Segregation was the official policy of the US government.
 
I would take my annual leave in the country I was stationed in when on active duty. Traveled around the country, met the people, learned a bit about them, tried their foot. Made the necessary ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ we all found in the military grind worth while. When I retired I had pen pals in 70+ countries. Some still active. I liked meeting new people and seeing new places. I found that, by and large, people were people wherever I went. Made Earth feel almost cozy. Had some ... interesting ... times. Full grown hyena came to my tent one night. Looked around, ignored me, stole my beef jerky. Moocher. Camp honcho said he'd warned us not to keep food in our tents. l forgot that jerky. Fought fores" t fires on the slopes of Mt. Etna, Mt. Pinatubo, helped clean up after taifun hit Japan. Had a house fall on me south of Tokyo. Didn't get a scratch. CO told me "you must be an American gojira!" Wouldn't dream of arguing with a four-striper.
 
Yes they do. Not verbally out loud, perhaps, but kids imitate what they see. If they see adults self-segregating, then they will self-segregate. As they have for generations in America back to when Segregation was the official policy of the US government.
Ah, the blank state.
 
It found that whether liberal or conservative, White people preferred to move to less diverse areas. It was right there in the quotation.
Again, what does that have to do with your admiration of a kiddie diddler?
I mean that they didn't want them there. White progressives are all about diversity; but not in their neighborhood.
You can keep saying that. You'll just keep being wrong.
 
the video briefly mentions orania, a whites only south african town of 1000 people founded in 1991.


why do you guys think it'll fail?
It's drawing on my experience of the bumbling manchildren who usually make up the far right. Don't most of their projects tend to crash and burn?
 
Cults think they are "special", above everyone else. Any hate directed towards them reinforces that feeling of superior exclusivity. It is perceived as jealousy that the "outsiders" can't have what they have, or be what they are.

Meh. If they want to live exclusive lives, let them. The Amish seem to muddle through reasonably well.

In my view, this is also how MAGA and white nationalists view their lives. They have "seen the light" and are special somehow. Their guru and prophet, Trump, knows all and leads then on. They should be treated like the Amish treat themselves: confined to a geographical space and fenced off from society, there to lead their own lives untouched by modern life or national laws.
The difference between the Amish and the vast majority of groups like this is that the Amish don't want to impose their world on everybody else. The Amish are ok living in a world where their neighbours are different. White supremacists are not.
 
After getting Martha's Vineyard confused with Nantucket, @Trausti continues to emphasize his ignorance of Martha's Vineyard:

Quoting Wikipedia:
True, but Portugeuse..and People from Spain, are not considered, by the the Official US Gov definitiove to be Hispanic, but Europaen,
Hispanic means descended at least partially from the Native Peoples who inhaited the Americas before the Euros showed up.
 

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