Dull Academic Incessant Liturgical Yapping: Philosophical Orations on Order & Reaction
The best way for a right wing area to not get attacked by USG is to be ambiguously a part of the US
What did I say? This is the way:
"The best way for a right wing area to not get attacked by USG is to be ambiguously a part of the US"
"The best way for a right wing area to not get attacked by USG is to be ambiguously a part of the US"
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Niggas with money be like....
Dull Academic Incessant Liturgical Yapping: Philosophical Orations on Order & Reaction
What did I say? This is the way: "The best way for a right wing area to not get attacked by USG is to be ambiguously a part of the US"
Listen, all I'm saying is wouldn't it be great if the United States government sometimes forgets that you even exist?
One of the most common criticisms I've received when my content gets posted on other channels is in the context of real estate posting. Critics will ask, "how deep in Coon Town is this house?" They'll speculate, "that town must be in Niggerville."
If that were the case, if a house being cheap implies that it's in a highly black area, then we'd expect the correlation between how white an area is and the median home price in that area to be positive. Heck, if it's a general rule, we'd expect the correlation to be both strong and positive.
However, when we check the data, that's not what we find. I ran data from different census levels, assessing the correlation between the percentage of an area that is non-Hispanic White and the median cost of a house in said area.
At high levels--regional, division, and state--the correlation is fairly strong but negative; that is, it's significantly cheaper on average to live in states with a larger white population.
At lower levels--counties, places, zip code tabulation areas, county subdivisions, and census tracts--the trend is weak but universally negative. The pattern tends to be that the trend line starts low, the least white places are cheap, rises significantly as you approach the national average of 60% white, and then it declines, with the whitest areas pulling the trend line under the starting point.
It's definitely not wrong to say that areas with a large amount of blacks tend to be cheap. However, areas with a mixture of whites and other races are what tend to pull the line up, with 90% or higher white areas being even cheaper than the mostly non-white areas on average.
An area being cheap does not imply that it is Coontown. Many of the cheapest areas in terms of real estate are 90+% white.
If that were the case, if a house being cheap implies that it's in a highly black area, then we'd expect the correlation between how white an area is and the median home price in that area to be positive. Heck, if it's a general rule, we'd expect the correlation to be both strong and positive.
However, when we check the data, that's not what we find. I ran data from different census levels, assessing the correlation between the percentage of an area that is non-Hispanic White and the median cost of a house in said area.
At high levels--regional, division, and state--the correlation is fairly strong but negative; that is, it's significantly cheaper on average to live in states with a larger white population.
At lower levels--counties, places, zip code tabulation areas, county subdivisions, and census tracts--the trend is weak but universally negative. The pattern tends to be that the trend line starts low, the least white places are cheap, rises significantly as you approach the national average of 60% white, and then it declines, with the whitest areas pulling the trend line under the starting point.
It's definitely not wrong to say that areas with a large amount of blacks tend to be cheap. However, areas with a mixture of whites and other races are what tend to pull the line up, with 90% or higher white areas being even cheaper than the mostly non-white areas on average.
An area being cheap does not imply that it is Coontown. Many of the cheapest areas in terms of real estate are 90+% white.
Dull Academic Incessant Liturgical Yapping: Philosophical Orations on Order & Reaction
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I've put together a handy series of maps to illustrate this data. There's plenty of mostly white areas that are affordable.
Up next, I'll post a full list of 90+% non-Hispanic white counties where the average house costs less than $100k; only posting by the most strict standards because this is already a 201 item list; loosening up the standards would make it far too big:
Up next, I'll post a full list of 90+% non-Hispanic white counties where the average house costs less than $100k; only posting by the most strict standards because this is already a 201 item list; loosening up the standards would make it far too big:
Dull Academic Incessant Liturgical Yapping: Philosophical Orations on Order & Reaction
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Marion, AL, Clay, AR, Fulton, AR, Lawrence, AR, Randolph, AR, Sharp, AR, Brantley, GA, Adams, IA, Appanoose, IA, Audubon, IA, Calhoun, IA, Decatur, IA, Greene, IA, Hancock, IA, Hardin, IA, Ida, IA, Keokuk, IA, Lucas, IA, Monona, IA, Montgomery, IA, Page, IA, Pocahontas, IA, Van_Buren, IA, Wayne, IA, Christian, IL, Clay, IL, Crawford, IL, Edgar, IL, Edwards, IL, Fayette, IL, Franklin, IL, Fulton, IL, Gallatin, IL, Greene, IL, Hamilton, IL, Hancock, IL, Hardin, IL, Henderson, IL, Marion, IL, Mason, IL, Montgomery, IL, Pike, IL, Richland, IL, Saline, IL, Scott, IL, Stark, IL, Wabash, IL, Wayne, IL, White, IL, Blackford, IN, Crawford, IN, Fayette, IN, Jay, IN, Randolph, IN, Sullivan, IN, Vermillion, IN, Cloud, KS, Comanche, KS, Decatur, KS, Greenwood, KS, Hodgeman, KS, Jewell, KS, Kingman, KS, Lincoln, KS, Mitchell, KS, Morris, KS, Osborne, KS, Phillips, KS, Republic, KS, Rooks, KS, Smith, KS, Wallace, KS, Washington, KS, Wilson, KS, Woodson, KS, Ballard, KY, Bath, KY, Bell, KY, Bracken, KY, Breathitt, KY, Butler, KY, Caldwell, KY, Carlisle, KY, Clay, KY, Clinton, KY, Crittenden, KY, Edmonson, KY, Elliott, KY, Estill, KY, Fleming, KY, Floyd, KY, Green, KY, Harlan, KY, Hart, KY, Jackson, KY, Knott, KY, Knox, KY, Lawrence, KY, Lee, KY, Leslie, KY, Letcher, KY, Lewis, KY, Livingston, KY, Magoffin, KY, Menifee, KY, Metcalfe, KY, Morgan, KY, Muhlenberg, KY, Nicholas, KY, Ohio, KY, Perry, KY, Pike, KY, Robertson, KY, Rockcastle, KY, Wayne, KY, Wolfe, KY, Clare, MI, Gogebic, MI, Iron, MI, Ontonagon, MI, Atchison, MO, Barton, MO, Carroll, MO, Grundy, MO, Harrison, MO, Hickory, MO, Holt, MO, Iron, MO, Knox, MO, Lewis, MO, Linn, MO, Mercer, MO, Putnam, MO, Reynolds, MO, Ripley, MO, Schuyler, MO, Shelby, MO, Worth, MO, Liberty, MT, Emmons, ND, Grant, ND, Logan, ND, McIntosh, ND, Nelson, ND, Slope, ND, Steele, ND, Antelope, NE, Blaine, NE, Boyd, NE, Brown, NE, Franklin, NE, Furnas, NE, Garden, NE, Grant, NE, Greeley, NE, Hayes, NE, Hitchcock, NE, Keya_Paha, NE, Nance, NE, Nuckolls, NE, Pawnee, NE, Richardson, NE, Rock, NE, Thayer, NE, Webster, NE, Wheeler, NE, Allegany, NY, St, Lawrence, NY, Crawford, OH, Vinton, OH, Cambria, PA, Cameron, PA, McKean, PA, Venango, PA, Campbell, SD, Faulk, SD, McPherson, SD, Miner, SD, Benton, TN, Hancock, TN, Buchanan, VA, Dickenson, VA, Lee, VA, Norton, VA, Russell, VA, Wise, VA, Boone, WV, Braxton, WV, Brooke, WV, Clay, WV, Fayette, WV, Hancock, WV, Lincoln, WV, Logan, WV, Mingo, WV, Nicholas, WV, Ritchie, WV, Tyler, WV, Webster, WV, Wirt, WV, Wyoming, WV.
Forwarded from Sol
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