AvalonXQ said:
You mean to say "Yes" here, I think.
Because I've lived there.
Cities bulkanize. Groups become heavily insular and racist. A new Bulgarian family moves into the area, they move into the Bulgarian neighborhood and interact with the new Bulgarians. They're quickly taught why they have to side-step the Koreans and what black neighborhoods are dangerous and where to go to find cheap Guatamalan labor. Because racial and cultural identity is so emphasized, you interact with people different than yourself at arms length, and the only stereotypes and problems are just carried down into a new generation.
I live there now. I've lived in downtown Atlanta and I currently live in a suburb of Atlanta. Of course new immigrants move next to what they're familiar with; it's a big place, a new COUNTRY, and it's scary. Many can barely speak the language.
Every new generation integrates more though, whether their parents like it or not. They said the same things you did about the Irish, Italians, Polish, and many other subgroups back when significant immigration into New York was occurring. Today there are still some heavily ethnic areas in New York, but you also find quite a large melting pot of multicultural areas, where people of all ethnicities live side by side and work together.
Racial and cultural identity has not faded at all -- rather, in New York it remains something to be proud of, as it does in many other cities, and everyone begins to interact. Yes, there are always problems, and that's because when you cram so many people together into a small space, you _get_ problems. But the end results are far better than completely segregating everyone away from each other.
As above.
Because I've lived there. There are plenty of minority families in the areas I've lived, but not enough to form sub-communities. So they join the same churches and schools and community groups, they live in the same neighborhoods, as the rest of us. Which means our moms swap recipes, our dads play golf, our kids invite each other over to each others' houses.
I've lived there too, in a suburb in West Michigan. I didn't even understand what a black person was until I was 10, because we only had one black family in my entire school. I've seen what happens when I've traveled through the more sparsely populated areas in Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Louisiana; the areas segregate off almost completely. I spent a lot of time passing through a lot of small towns around the South for various reasons, and there isn't any of this "same church", "same school" stuff you're talking about.
You learn very quickly in the city where your culture is, and that's where you're welcomed and expected to stay. And then the city folk can point to all the minorities their city has, way over there.
I'll let individuals in each city weigh in, but I can assure you that in Metro Atlanta, that's not how it's _actually_ happening. There are enclaves, (see what I mentioned above WRT "of course immigrants move near what they're familiar with") but even out where I live, my immediate neighbors are from Jamaica and the Dominican Republic, respectively. When I lived downtown, anywhere I went I routinely saw Asians*, blacks, Hispanics, you name it.
A believer in secular government and the separation of church and state. I'm a libertarian; I don't need anybody else to be coerced into Christian morality.
In short, you identify as "Christian" when asked, and in my hypothetical question about "what church do you go to", you name an actual church that people in the area would recognize.
I'm sorry, but your situation isn't even remotely equivalent to an atheist. What you are is a Christian who believes in the separation of church and state, and this policy we will agree on. But what you don't seem to understand is that in order for your ideas to be even heard, you're passing a litmus test that's administered in the first one or two questions -- a litmus test that I either fail, or evade ("I don't really go to church these days", "I haven't gone to church in awhile"). I typically opt for telling the truth, and I assure you -- it's a lot different arguing in favor of secularism when you haven't passed the 'One Of Us' litmus test.