V. On Racial Discrimination
Racial segregation and discrimination are still
deep-seated in the United States. African-Americans and other colored people are
still living in "another United States".
The ethnic minorities are at the bottom of American
society. Statistics released by the U.S. Census Bureau in November 2006
indicated that according to the 2005 data, the average yearly household income
was 50,622 U.S. dollars for whites, compared with36,278 for Hispanics and 30,940
for blacks. White people's income was 64 percent more than the blacks and 40
percent more than the Hispanics. Three-fourths of white households owned their
homes in 2005, compared with 46 percent of black households and 48 percent of
Hispanic households. (The Washington Post, Nov. 14, 2006) The poverty rate for
whites was 8.3 percent in 2005, while the rates were 24.9 percent for blacks and
21.8 percent for Hispanics. (U.S. Census Bureau, Aug. 29, 2006) Nearly one in
five Hispanics lacked sufficient access to nutritious food and one in 20
regularly went hungry. Blacks took up 42 percent of all the homeless people in
the United States. (USA TODAY, Dec. 22, 2006) The percentage of colored people
uncovered by government health insurance was much higher than that of whites. In
2005, the uninsured rate was 32.7 percent for Hispanics and 19.6 for blacks,
compared with 11.3 percent for whites. And in the hurricane-hit southern area,
the poor and blacks lived a much worse life. During its eighty-seventh session
the UN Human Rights Committee noted in its consideration of a report submitted
by the United States on its implementation of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights, that the committee "remains concerned about
information that poor people and in particular African-Americans were
disadvantaged by the rescue and evacuation plans implemented when Hurricane
Katrinahit the United States, and continue to be disadvantaged under the
reconstruction plans". (Human Rights Committee, Eighty-seventh session, 10-28
July 2006)
The African-Americans and other ethnic minorities
have been subject to discrimination in employment and workplace. The
unemployment rate of the blacks was more than twice that of the whites.
According to statistics released by the U.S. Department of Labor on Dec. 8,
2006, the unemployment rate in November 2006 was 8.6 percent for the blacks and
3.9 percent for the whites. The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
receives more than 500 complaints against racial discrimination every week and
more than 26,000 every year; in fiscal year 2005, it received 26,740 charges of
race discrimination. A report released by an economic and policy research center
in the United States on Dec. 15, 2006 said that biased government policies and
negative coverage of the media have limited the development of the youngsters of
ethnic minorities in the U.S. Whites are more easily to be promoted to the
management than the blacks and Hispanics. An African-American employee of
Merrill Lynch & Co. accused the largest U.S. retail brokerage of racial
discrimination in 2005. And in 2006, 16 current and former black employees of
the company joined the lawsuit, accusing Merrill of systematic and pervasive
discrimination against African-American brokers and trainees nationwide in
hiring, promotion and compensation. Tyson Foods Inc., the largest U.S. meat
company was also accused by thirteen current and former African-American
employees of racial discrimination in 2006. (Reuters, Nov. 7, 2006)
Racial disparities in education are also growing.
According to U.S. Census Bureau's 2005 data, in the United States more than half
ethnic minority males dropped school before high school graduation, 67.5 percent
Hispanics and 53 percent blacks got no further education after graduating from
high school. White Americans were more likely to hold a graduate or professional
degree. At least 30 percent white adults held a bachelor's degree, compared with
17 percent black adults and 12 percent Hispanic adults. Racial segregation in
education is in fact quite serious. According to a symposium held in the
University of California at Los Angeles in October 2006, in the Los Angeles
school district, 67 percent Hispanic students studied in 90 percent to 100
percent non-white schools. The racial divide in Los Angeles high schools was
more serious. In Beverly High School, 73 percent students were whites, 8 percent
were Asians, and 6 percent were Hispanics. As a contrast, among the 4,940
students in Rosevelt High School, 98.9 percent were Hispanics and 1 percent were
blacks. There were big disparities in school facilities due to the racial
divide.
Racial discrimination is deep-rooted in America's law
enforcement and judicial systems. Discrimination against Muslims in law
enforcement has persisted in the United States since the September 11 attacks.
According to Associated Press reports, in November 2006 six Muslims, who were
returning from a religious conference, were taken off an airliner from
Minneapolis to Phoenix, handcuffed and questioned, only because a passenger had
passed a note about them to a flight attendant. In the aftermath of the
September 11 terror attacks, four airlines accused of breaking federal
anti-discrimination laws settled with the government. Transportation Department
investigations found the airlines had unlawfully removed passengers because of
perceived ethnic or religious backgrounds. (The Associated Press, Nov. 28, 2006)
And Latino and African-American motorists in most areas of Los Angeles were
significantly more likely than whites to be asked during police stops to leave
their vehicles and submit to searches, according to a study ordered by the city
in 2006 (Los Angeles Times, July 13, 2006).
In judicial practice, blacks are usually more
severely punished than whites. According to statistics of the National Urban
League, of the sentences issued in 12 crime categories in the State Courts,
sentences for black males were longer than white males in all of them. (The
State of Black America 2006, issued by National Urban League, March 27, 2006)
Black people account for only 12.1 percent of the U.S. population, however,
according to statistics of the U.S. Department of Justice, at the end of 2005,
about 40 percent of all male inmates sentenced to more than one year were black,
and 20 percent were Latino Americans. According to a report released by the
Human Rights Watch on Dec. 1, 2006, the number of black inmates was 6.6 times
that of whites and the number of Latino inmates was 2.5 times that of white
inmates. Statistics showed that about one out of 12 black men were in jail or
prison, compared with one in 100 white men. Researchers pointed to poverty, a
lack of opportunities, racism in the criminal justice system forthe black-white
prison gap. (Answer to AIDS Mystery Found Behind Bars, Washington Post, March 9,
2006)
Racial segregation and discrimination results in an
increase of hate crimes. The number of extreme racist and neo-Nazi organizations
has increased by 33 percent in recent five years, rising from 672 in 2004 to 803
in 2005. ([Argentina] Clarin, May 25, 2006) Meanwhile, the number of hate crimes
kept increasing. Ananalysis of the 7,160 single-bias incidents by bias
motivation revealed that 54.7 percent were motivated by a racial bias. (FBI
press release, Oct. 16, 2006) New York City reported 230 hate crimes in 2006,
about 8 percent more than in 2005, with the number of those targeted at Asian
Americans more than doubled.
A CNN/Opinion Research poll published in December 2006 found that 84 percent of blacks and 66 percent of whites believe racism is a serious problem, and there are many different kinds of racism aimed at many different groups in U.S. society. (CNN, Dec. 15, 2006) กก
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