Interesting statistics on MLK Day.
In 1958, 48 percent of white Americans polled by Gallup said that “if colored people came to live next door,” they would be likely to move.
By 1978, only 13 percent still said that;
Today the proportion has fallen to 1 percent.
In the World Values Survey researchers in 59 countries asked residents how they would feel about having neighbors of a different race, . The United States ranked 47th out of 59 countries surveyed, making it more racially accepting than Japan, Mexico, Germany, South Korea, and the Netherlands, among others.
In 1964, a mere 18 percent of white Americans claimed to have a friend who was black. Four decades later, Gallup found that the proportion of interracial friendships had more than quadrupled: 82 percent of whites said they had close nonwhite friends (and 88 percent of blacks reported having close friends who were not black).
Over 90 per cent of Americans approve of interracial marriage. It was just 3 per cent in 1967 according to the Pew Research Center.
By 2015, 17 percent of all US newlyweds — one of every six — had married someone of another color.
And when Barack Obama in 2008 won the White House, it was with a greater share of the white vote than six of the previous seven Democratic nominees.