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by gnramires
2179 days ago
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See the legend. Things are ranked from "Good to bad", (Urban stress, unemployment) and proportion white population is right there in parallel, screaming "White"=="Good". There are a number of other lesser reasons, including conflating regions of high urban stress as "Evil" or "Angry" instead of just unhappy[0]. The face visualization just implies too much of a value judgement on the data -- too correlated with the issue (yet misrepresentative) to be a good idea imo. [0]: Even happy/unhappy may not reflect well at all this variable (again because that's a complicated human emotion, not a simple function of "Health crime and transportation factors"). Edit: I think it's also not necessary to call the map creator (or maybe the map itself) racist, this implies some kind of intentional discrimination (and is quite strong imo), but it does have to me grave mentioned problems. |
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The legend uses the words "Low/High" and not "Bad/Good." It's a quantitative measure, not a moral/aesthetic judgment.
The conclusion of this graphic would be - There is more stress in South Central LA, which has a higher proportion of Black Americans. Or possibly, the least stress is towards the West, where there are relatively fewer Blacks.
I guess if you are concerned it will read as, "In South Central LA, there are angry black people, don't go there!" - that leap of faith will be made regardless of how you visualize the data. "Poor people are naturally lazy/violent/immoral," is a stereotype that has existed for far longer than any widely accepted attempt at data visualization.