What is busing?
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  What is busing?
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Sec. of State Superique
Superique
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« on: August 04, 2013, 11:45:40 AM »

It has been a major issue during the 60s and 70s but I don't really know what is Busing and how the political spectrum usually stood on that specific matter.
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FEMA Camp Administrator
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« Reply #1 on: August 04, 2013, 11:54:45 AM »

By my understanding, it was integrating the busing--and possibly schools--of various areas in the U.S. A "social experiment", naturally a bunch of white folk in cities like Boston were unhappy about it, and it contributed to white flight. In certain areas, what occurred as that there would be inefficient bus routes and school choices merely for the sake of integration, bypassing convenient schooling choices for neighborhoods. However, in Southern areas, oftentimes the opposite would occur, where very inefficient bus routes would be chosen specifically so that whites and blacks remained separate in their busing and schools.
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opebo
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« Reply #2 on: August 04, 2013, 12:31:04 PM »

Great attempt, of course was abandoned due to white racist backlash.
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barfbag
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« Reply #3 on: August 04, 2013, 01:26:10 PM »

Great attempt, of course was abandoned due to white racist backlash.

Are you a guilty white liberal opebo?
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opebo
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« Reply #4 on: August 04, 2013, 05:13:35 PM »

Great attempt, of course was abandoned due to white racist backlash.

Are you a guilty white liberal opebo?

No, I don't feel guilt. 
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Indy Texas 🇺🇦🇵🇸
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« Reply #5 on: August 04, 2013, 11:12:21 PM »

Basically, public school segregation was a problem (still is, but even moreso back then).

Non-white schools tended to get the short end of the stick when it came to funding, disadvantaging the non-white children who went there in the process.

But because neighborhoods were so heavily segregated, redrawing district and feeder zones often wasn't sufficient. So children were bused to schools that were often quite far from where they lived in order to achieve more racial balance. It would also be harder to treat predominantly minority schools differently from a funding standpoint if a sizable number of white kids went there.

Busing was more of a response to white flight than a cause of it. White flight started in the '40s and '50s when public housing in city centers began being developed and housing discrimination became harder to get away with.

Whites in the South tended to respond to busing by pulling their kids out of public school and opening private schools that were implicitly for whites only. These became known as "segregation academies" and were often affiliated with conservative Protestant church congregations. Go to any major city in the South and you'll notice that a lot of their private day schools opened in the 1960s and 1970s - private schools were virtually nonexistent in the South prior to that, save for a handful of elite boarding schools. Most of these schools still exist today and by and large still have disproportionately white student bodies.
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