A very common segregation tool

Young Americans for Freedom made the mistake of sneering at the observation that racism is built into many US highways, thus giving a lot of people the opportunity to educate onlookers about the well-documented fact that racism is built into many US highways. Own goal.

No, they’re right, it’s not parody, and it’s true.

That thing about roads designed not to allow buses? That’s closely tied to voter suppression, too. The suppressionist bills that limit voting places are helped along by extra difficulty getting from Point A to Point B for people with little money and no car. If you have to go a long distance to vote and there is no bus route near you – bam, there’s your obstacle to voting.

LA public radio station KCRW in June 2020:

While Los Angeles does not feature statues of slave traders or Confederate generals, there are less obvious monuments to structural racism. Just turn to freeways.

When construction of the Interstate Highway System began in the 1950s, white-dominated municipalities nationwide often routed freeways through communities of color or as a divider between Black and white neighborhoods.

The 10 freeway is a prime example. It split the affluent northern parts of the LA basin from some of the economically struggling Black areas of South LA. This affected thriving Black communities, including the Pico neighborhood in Santa Monica and the Sugar Hill area in West Adams. 

Planners didn’t generally say “put them in the black neighborhoods,” at least not in public, they framed it as urban renewal, slum clearance, a brighter tomorrow.

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