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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/wp_mjgj8c/racefiles.com/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114<\/a><\/p>\n I wrote a post about Ferguson<\/a> earlier in the week that got me thinking of The Hunger Games<\/a>. Not the movies. I mean the books. You can call them “Young Adult” if you like, but I loved those books. And now, I feel like the author, Suzanne Collins, may be a prophet.<\/p>\n Play along with me for a minute. The Hunger Games is set in a dystopian future land called Panem. The center of Panem is a wealthy capitol city surrounded in concentric circles by 12 districts, each poorer and browner than the last. In order to maintain order, leaders pit members of the poor districts against one another in an annual cycle of deadly Hunger Games, invented in order to punish those who once fomented revolution, and to overwhelm any future such ambitions with the massive display of power required to pull the games off. Residents of the wealthy capitol watch on television as the competitors tear each other apart, entertaining them while confirming the need for subjugation and segregation of the districts.<\/p>\n Yes, I am a super-nerd, and believe me, it doesn’t stop there. Next month I may be traveling 700 miles to watch a Marvel movie marathon with the super-nerdiest men of color alive while discussing the political implications of scientifically mutated humans fighting gods, fascism, and weapons of their own making.<\/p>\n But, nerdy or not, if we view the crisis in Ferguson as the flip side of urban gentrification, comparing what we’re seeing to The Hunger Games might not be such a stretch.<\/p>\n Poor people, disproportionate numbers of whom are Black and brown, are being pushed out into the periphery of metropolitan areas while privileged whites leave the periphery (and take their capital with them) to move into redeveloped inner-city playgrounds. And as those playgrounds grow whiter and more economically homogenous, they grow increasingly more expensive, causing successive waves of less privileged groups to be pushed into the first ring of the periphery. Their arrival ends up pushing the first, most easily displaced wave of migrants even further out.<\/p>\n Here’s how it all starts.\u00a0Al Jazeera<\/a>\u00a0reports that whites were \u00a0almost 74 \u00a0percent of Ferguson in 1990, while Blacks were 25.1 percent. By 2010, 29.3 percent of Ferguson residents were white, and 67.4 percent were Black. Almost a complete reversal. Meanwhile, eight miles away, in St. Louis, the population went from being 28.1 percent white in 2000, to being 49.2 percent white in 2010. St. Louis is the 16th fastest gentrifying city in the country.<\/p>\n This dynamic is mirrored in every city in which I’ve lived – Portland, Seattle, New York, Washington, D.C., and now the San Francisco Bay Area.<\/p>\n As of August 2014, the\u00a0average rent<\/a>\u00a0for a one-bedroom unit within ten miles of San Francisco was $2,897 per month.\u00a0According to CNN<\/a>, the median income for American families in 2013 was just over $51,000. \u00a0If you subtract taxes from that $51,000, \u00a0you end up with somewhere between $36-37,000 per year of take home pay. $2,897 times 12 = $34,764. In other words, the median income American family cannot afford the average rent on a one-bedroom home anywhere within ten miles of San Francisco.<\/p>\n The first wave of forced migrants are the most vulnerable, and among them poor people of color, especially African Americans, are over-represented. But governments in the abandoned suburbs to which the Black and brown poor are being forced to migrate aren’t changing as quickly as the demographics around them. That’s why, in essence, what we have in Ferguson is de facto apartheid. A white minority rules over a Black majority, and it relies upon repression to contain the resulting tension.<\/p>\n