emilybookmark's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective sad slow-paced

5.0

lowefforthuman's review against another edition

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5.0

Great book that that systematically and devastatingly lays out exactly how America as a country and culture has worked at every level of government to keep those classified as “not-white” out of positions of power or acquiring power and resources.

unfortunatelycole's review against another edition

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4.0

4 stars. This book has valuable information, and is a key read for white Americans like myself. That said, I'm not giving it 5 stars for two reasons:

1. The book felt very repetitive. Each section felt like I was reading the same thing multiple times and most likely could've been condensed even more. The use of certain phrases of names of associations over and over again was rough to read.

2. The use of the r slur. This threw me for a loop. At the end of chapter 10, the author writes about Jackie Robinson being arrested and almost convicted for sitting in an unsegregated section of a military bus while he was an army lieutenant in Fort Hood, Texas, during World War II. The author goes on to say, "Had Robinson been dishonorably discharged, the Brooklyn Dodgers would have undoubtedly have refused to hire him, and the trajectory of civil rights in the twentieth century would have been r*****d at the least." While the phrase was not used in a derogatory way, the word choice itself was wrong. I understand the word was used in the literal sense of saying "slow", but they could've just said that. Given the history of the r slur and its use against those with intellectual disabilities, I don't understand how people can think it's okay to use.

Despite this, I still think it is an important read, and although I highly question the authors word choice, I truly recommend people read this.

febender's review against another edition

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4.0

Incredibly informative, though the writing is not very fluid. Absolutely recommended read to understand discrimination in housing.

happylilkt's review against another edition

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5.0

Updating my rating to 5 stars because I can't stop thinking about and recommending this book. Really, you should read it.

One of the best books I've read so far on race in the US. I prefer a historical / fact based study as opposed to lectures and sermons, and this one absolutely delivered. It's a highly focused, compact account of official and unofficial housing, unionization, and property tax policies that boxed out African Americans during the most significant era of suburbanization in the US—effectively locking in segregated communities—and restricted their comparative ability to increase wealth. Humanity's obsession with status and exclusion is on full display here. This book definitely turned upside down many of my casual assumptions about segregated neighborhoods and I highly recommend it to anyone who wants to study the politics of race in the US.

Some of my personal Notes:
At p. 76
While some may argue that the refusal to insure / grant FHA loans to non-whites was simply based on property values/risk assessments, or at worst just reflective of the cultural norms, what I find most infuriating is that, in my opinion, one of the chief roles of government is to regulate what human incentives get wrong—some (unrelated to housing) examples: restrict pollution and other negative externalities; standardize nutritional information on processed foods, and so on—and in this case where they should have been regulating against discrimination, they were instead fostering and promoting it. Seems like it would have been better for the government to have not been involved with housing at all. They should have just stayed out of housing (except for regulating non-discrimination policies). I'm definitely of the mind that more programs should be privatized (still with government oversight/accountability) and this history just reinforces that.

at p. 35
As much as the codification of segregated housing appalls me, what's worse is how the communities responded to the courts overturning it. Ceasing to build housing altogether, providing vouchers for private housing to whites, giving local groups the ability to veto proposed projects, etc. Obviously the culture in power was rejecting integration and refused to accept government intervention--which makes me wonder, how does a government legislate ethically what a people reject? Do you give some space and time for the people to come around, but prosecute any violation of the law? Do you give in to the racist majority? Do you try to strong-arm through it and risk the rebellious response of the group you're trying to reach? I never took a public policy class in college, so maybe I would be able to fathom this if I had. It seems to me (from both personal experience and as a student of history) that forcing / controlling people doesn't really work, but I don't think a government or court is justified in giving in to unethical laws, either. Ugh. What I do know is that division is ugly and I know it offends God.

cleothegreat's review against another edition

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5.0

AMAZING. had no idea about the mass segregation/racism in the housing industry. such an informative book

jtgill's review against another edition

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challenging emotional informative reflective sad slow-paced

4.0

sudorm's review against another edition

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challenging informative sad slow-paced

3.75

stephand2449's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective slow-paced

4.0

cathy1665's review against another edition

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challenging informative inspiring fast-paced

5.0

Read for a class that discussed the book. Many stories/examples that illustrate the many causes and effects of segregation in the U.S.