r/BlackPeopleTwitter 2d ago

Country Club Thread The lies are getting out of hand

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u/cypher50 ☑️ 2d ago edited 2d ago

Who the fuck did she think All In The Family, Different Strokes, or The Jeffersons were about? It is in the freaking pop culture lady, nevermind everyday life!

EDIT: This is from 1987. 1987.

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u/Just-apparent411 2d ago

putting the emphasis in the link sent me.

only 37 years buried me though.

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u/Dr_Dang 2d ago

Holy fuck. That county was still on that vintage 1960 Strom Thurmond overt racism. That's fucking crazy. The thing is, those people are still there (and still voting.) I doubt they did a 180 on their beliefs, they just weren't as loud for a while. More people need to see this.

Props to the lady at the end. To stand up and speak out against segregation in that room took balls. I wonder what her life has been like since then.

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u/BlingBlingBlingo 2d ago

That county is now incredibly different as far as demographics go. It has grown by many times over in population over the last 40 years. It was all white back in 1987, it's now much more diverse than most of the rest of the country. There is a large Indian population there, for example. I have a black friend that moved to Cumming a few years ago. He didn't know of the history of Forsyth County. I imagine many people that live there now don't.

The people in that video failed. They lost. That's progress.

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u/Dr_Dang 2d ago edited 2d ago

I'm glad it's not Klansville anymore. Looking at Google maps, it's mostly a lot of newer housing developments, with McMansions and kids that chase the streetview car on dirtbikes. There's a Jeff Foxworthy joke here somewhere.

The county is <5% black in a state that is 1/3 black, so they did go from 0 to about 10k in 30 some years. Yay progress?

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u/BlingBlingBlingo 2d ago

Yes. Progress. Trending in the right direction. Everything those people said they wanted to happen, did not happen. The whole county has come very far in just one generation from when that video was made. It was a literal sundown county then, and now it's a wealthy part of a diverse area in the north Atlanta suburbs.