Many people have an idyllic view of the suburbs. You can have a lawn! Access to good schools! Safety! But much of that American dream has been historically reserved for white people. On this week's episode,
Nikole Hannah-Jones, who appeared on
Adam Ruins the Suburbs, joins us on the podcast to discuss racist federal housing laws like redlining, which prevented African American families from buying homes in certain neighborhoods in post-World War II America. This had disastrous rippling effects on the African American community; these laws made it harder for them to accrue wealth over the years and join the middle class. And even when these laws were ultimately deemed illegal under the Fair Housing Act of 1968, many didn't have the money to move into wealthier, whiter neighborhoods. This continues to have repercussions today - segregated neighborhoods means segregated schools, which means education resources are of course going to the wealthier, whiter school districts.
Nikole is an award-winning investigative reporter who covers civil rights and racial injustice for
The New York Times Magazine. She currently writes extensively on modern-day school segregation throughout the country. You can find her fantastic story for
This American Life, "The Problem We All Live With," on the recent desegregation of the Normandie School District in Missouri
here.
Why don't you inform white parents about the benefits their child will have at the integrated school instead? The wrong preconceptions of the white parents are the problem, and harmful to their own offspring.