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by IkmoIkmo
3731 days ago
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> I mean in my state (WA), 48% of people below the poverty line are white, 18% are hispanic, 14% are asian, 14% are black. You may just be getting numbers back based on the ethnicity that predominantly lives in your state. Look at relative poverty numbers. i.e., of the number of people who are of ethnicity X, how many are poor? I think you'll surely find a correlation that OP describes as a decent first-order approximation. For example: white 9%, hispanic 18%, black 37%. That's 2x and 4x more likely to be poor vs white depending on if you're hispanic or black. [0] http://kff.org/other/state-indicator/poverty-rate-by-raceeth... |
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You can easily read the essay pretending that everybody in the US who isn't white simply doesn't exist, and it still makes completes sense.