acptulsa
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- Joined
- Jan 2, 2008
- Messages
- 75,446
I guess what I mean is - it's well known within the black community that there were thriving black cities (or section of cities) during the era of segregation. But no one has really satisfactorily explained the decline.
On the other hand, there is a wealth of information from libertarians claiming that govt intervention has all sorts of negative results.
So I just kind of put the two together, though I admit I haven't done any extensive research to justify my claim. But I still think the facts support my above post.
They most certainly do.
In Tulsa during the oil boom, the Greenwood area thrived. Roughnecking in an oil field was and is hard and dangerous work, and no one does it for chicken feed. Many African Americans have been willing to do this hard work over the years, though. And as a result, the Greenwood area thrived in the ugly old days of segregation. It was called the 'Black Wall St. of America.'
The 1921 riot burned it to the ground. Fortunately, that seems to have gotten the issue out of Tulsans' systems. One incident that infamously ugly seems to have been enough--we haven't had a serious race riot since. And Greenwood came back--better than ever. I remember when I was a kid and first heard about the riot. Having little concept that it had happened fifty years prior, I just assumed that's what had happened to Greenwood. Then I heard about its preeminence as a jazz center during World War II twenty years later than the riot.
My mother patiently explained to me that it declined right after desegregation. The shopkeepers couldn't get as good wholesale prices as the corporately-owned 'white stores'. Couldn't get the variety, either.
Shall we point to the ethnic minorities and laugh? Or shall we look at the rise of China--and look in our mirrors?