US-Counties, in denen ethnische Gruppen mehr als 50 % der Bevölkerung ausmachen

Von vividmaps

31 Comments

  1. what about people from spain? hispanic and white?
    and what about people from equatorial guinea? african-american hispanics?

  2. OwenLoveJoy on

    Get ready for “why are Americans obsessed with race” and about 600 comments arguing over what Hispanic means. Anyway neat map. Marion County Indiana joined the no majority group this year, I assume that keeps getting larger.

  3. haraldisdead on

    “Ethnic groups” make up 100% of the population, everywhere lmao.

  4. Indian_Chief_Rider on

    Colors match with race. Black for African Americans, brown for Hispanic Americans, and red for Native Americans. I wonder if this was intentional.

  5. brezenSimp on

    How do the Native American regions look like? Is it mostly nature or are there cities?

  6. Big_Rough_268 on

    Crazy to think the Dems saw this and were like let’s actively gas light the largest demographics in the country. Not just white people but Men of all other ethnicities too. Not saying what they were doing was bad but it was super dumb.

  7. Efficient-Wish9084 on

    “ethnic group”? I’m as white as they come, and I am a member of several ethnic groups….

  8. MouseJiggler on

    As opposed to individuals who are not a part of an ethnic group?

  9. On a cartographic note, the city point icons are too big. Makes Baltimore look white because the underlying polygon is obscured.

  10. mehardwidge on

    Title suggests it is *ethnicities*, but then the key and the map itself make clear it is *races* OR Hispanic identity.

    I suspect there are some counties that do have a majority *ethnicity*, but they would be much rarer. I imagine it would take a rural county settled mostly by one ethnic group, with little substantial in-migration later. I would be interested in seeing that map, too.

  11. Coriandercilantroyo on

    Would’ve expected Arizona to be more yellow. Is it because of non Hispanic influx into Phoenix metro?

  12. WTF is an “ethnic group” so, this means that the majorities in the other counties have no ethnicity at all? That’s moronic.

  13. EatThemAllOrNot on

    Always laughing when reading Americans dividing people into these buckets. Hey, they are overlapping, someone can be white and Hispanic at the same time!

  14. The major takeaway I’m getting from this map is that the United States is still quite a segregated country.

  15. I didn’t realize there were a lot of Hispanics way up in the Texas panhandle. I always figured that was pure white country.

  16. inevergreene on

    White Americans are not an ethnic group, they’re a racial classification. German-Americans, Irish-Americans, etc., are ethnic groups who are (mostly) white, although at this point many White Americans are mixed ethnicity.

  17. superlative_dingus on

    The fact that Oakland isn’t on this map but Stockton is makes me irrationally riled up! Nothing against Stockton in particular, Oakland is the county seat of Alameda county, which by many estimates is the most diverse county in the United States, and between a third and a half of students in Oakland schools speak a language other than English at home. Sure, a large fraction of whom speak Spanish, but besides these are 55 additional first languages! Our city has huge problems but it’s also an amazing display of cultural and linguistic diversity for a relatively small population.

  18. Why are all “Hispanics” lumped together based only in the lenguage from their previous country while all the anglophones are properly separed into groups based in their ancestry and history?

  19. Why are all “Hispanics” lumped together based only in the lenguage from their previous country while all the anglophones are properly separed into groups based in their ancestry and history?

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