NYIntensity wrote:
The argument now though is that the neighborhoods aren't diverse, which would lead to less diversity in the schools.
the appropriate counter to that argument, i think, falls on the shoulders of developers, zoning boards, and yuppies. let's face it, white flight ruined this country's urban dynamic, and the decline of what is now termed the "rust belt" is what pushed that over the edge. even before that, ghettos were and are breeding grounds for racial and cultural disparities that, at this point, seem impossible to atone for. one thing that certainly isn't helping is gentrification. this can go on for days, as it seems that every point feeds into another dilemma that feeds into another, until it forms a circle that never stops.
perhaps that's the reason i hate politics and economics.