Black colleges need to desegregate?
Originally Posted by 1blackman1
So perhaps you could point me towards a single instance, in any country, where segregation in schools, the workplace, or residences has worked to the benefit of a disadvantaged racial or ethnic minority? It's the other way around.
Based on collegesimply.com, I'm reading the average graduate of Southern University and A&M College makes $29,700 six years out of college and $38,000 ten years out. A graduate of LSU makes $43,200 six years out and $56,900 ten years out.
Based on your original post and alumni salaries, it appears the state of Louisiana is trying to shunt black students to an inferior college and then not providing the funds for a good education. If as you believe the reason is because the politicians are racists, then would they be able to get away with this if half the students at Southern were white?
It sounds like secondary school systems where black students in big cities get stuck in bad schools. Many Democratic politicians are in the pockets of the teachers unions so don't support school choice or getting rid of incompetent educators. Many Republican politicians are reluctant to provide sufficient support to poor children and poor single mothers, which affects educational outcomes too. Part of the solution requires upping the quality of the bad schools and/or closing them.
Now I seriously doubt you'd favor closing universities like Southern and educating the students at other institutions, or truly integrating Southern. Sadly you've probably been influenced by Democratic Party politicians to believe Black Americans should not integrate into American society to the extent that Italian Americans, Polish Americans and Irish Americans have. Or that Hispanic Americans have in areas where they're not the majority. The solution in the long term is for whites and blacks and Hispanics to marry each other and have kids. Unfortunately though that would deprive the Democratic Party of its most reliable voting block.