/balk/

There are places in America where poor blacks are missing altogether. Case in point, in the Bay Area, they used to keep them in Oakland first. But now, even that is being gentrified due to the immense amount of wealth in California, so you can spend days in Silicon Valley without seeing a single black person (many Russians, tho). Latinos are everywhere, they are the ubiquitous underclass (gardeners and cachiers), they become more prominent in So-Cal.

No it won't, embryonic genetic engineering is in its infancy. It will take a long time for it to become common clinical practice to eradicate genetic diseases, let alone be used for changing race. You'll be an old man or dead by the time such a thing happens, if at all.

Not to say anything about demographic change or problems with that, I don't give a crap about that, just wanted to correct that.

gentrification is a god send but is seen as a negative because it "pushes it out poor people"

but of course, diversification of neighborhoods and pushing out wealthy people (see: whites) is seen as good

race war now

>you'll have to be a little more specific
i mean as in placement within the city
are they random areas in the city?
alternatively, where do blacks tend to congregat? is it random or do they stick to certain parts like outskirts or centers?

>gypsies are a lot better of a minority than blacks because they're mostly harmless.
you've had way too many freedom steaks johnblacks at least produce SOME form of culture and are ok comedic relief

>changing race

I was just talking about selecting for certain SNPs. and innovation in new fields follows geometric growth

Blackreach, niggers.

that looks cute, never played Skyrim much. does it have many of those Morrowind-like landscapes?

...

>and innovation in new fields follows geometric growth
Not in the medical field it doesn't, I'm talking about application. Clinical trials take decades, and we're not even talking about tampering with embryos. There would be a huge backlash. We haven't even refined correction of genetic diseases, let alone casual editing. Not to mention that if you're talking about SNPs related to intelligence, there are so many that the "editing" process would be extremely inefficient given current toolkits.

"...a type of zero still to be discovered..."