▲ | defrost 5 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
> In America the racial cultures place different values on learning this skill. The US once had many community swimming pools prior to the civil rights amendment. Black people were segregated and few pools were built for them from their taxes. Come the era of equal rights a great many pools were filled in rather than suffer the horror of mixed races in the same water. Private swimming pools and pools at clubs grew in number and it remained that few black people had access to community pools. That was the case for a few decades, now hopefully past - but for a long time pools were associated not with swimming but with harassment and exclusion. The forgotten history of segregated swimming pools and amusement parks https://theconversation.com/the-forgotten-history-of-segrega... | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | conductr 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I dislike how any conversation about this stuff immediately devolves into a decades ago history lesson about a thing as the singular root cause. Sure everyone is well aware of the history and you’re not wrong but it’s also history and not been the case in a very long time. Unless you were so poor you couldn’t take your kids on a day trip to a free pool, there’s been very little hindrances in quite a long time at this point. No reason black persons under 30 or so shouldn’t be swimming at much higher rates than their parent/grandparents. Meanwhile, the black people i know well and even just interacting with acquaintances and such treat non-swimming as a sort of badge of blackness. They scoff at the idea of learning later in life. They scoff at the idea of teaching their kids. As if it would make them “less black”. This is why I frame it as a current cultural phenomenon of values and identity. Sure a lot of the stuff you said made it that way, but that was generations ago at this point and it will not reverse unless some intention exists to buck the cultural norm. | |||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||
▲ | firesteelrain 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
There are still community pools all across Florida - many open for over 40-50 years. County or city ran too. For example, in Florida: Taylor County (rural) has approximately 25 total public pools and bathing places In Alabama: Birmingham’s Parks & Recreation currently operates around 10-11 city‑run outdoor public pools, including Crestwood, Memorial, E.O. Jackson, Grayson, Underwood, Roosevelt, McAlpine, East Thomas. Though not all open every summer due to staffing or budget issues in recent years |