Interracial marriages in the U.S. have climbed to 4.8 million — a record 1 in 12 — with Latinos and Asians acting as the driving force behind the trend.
A Pew Research Center study, released Thursday, details a diversifying America where interracial unions and the mixed-race children they produce are challenging typical notions of race.
"The rise in interracial marriage indicates that race relations have improved over the past quarter century," said Daniel Lichter, a sociology professor at Cornell University. "Mixed-race children have blurred America's color line. They often interact with others on either side of the racial divide and frequently serve as brokers between friends and family members of different racial backgrounds," he said. "But America still has a long way to go."
The figures come from previous censuses as well as the 2008-2010 American Community Survey, which surveys 3 million households annually. The figures for "white" refer to those whites who are not of Hispanic ethnicity. For purposes of defining interracial marriages, Hispanic is counted as a race by many in the demographic field.
The study finds that 8.4 percent of all current U.S. marriages are interracial, up from 3.2 percent in 1980. While Hispanics and Asians remained the most likely, as in previous decades, to marry someone of a different race, the biggest jump in share since 2008 occurred among blacks, who historically have been the most segregated.
States in the West where Asian and Hispanic immigrants are more numerous, including Hawaii, Nevada, New Mexico and California, were among the most likely to have couples who "marry out" — more than 1 in 5. The West was followed by the South, Northeast and Midwest. By state, mostly white Vermont had the lowest rate of intermarriage, at 4 percent.
In all, more than 15 percent of new marriages in 2010 were interracial. Blacks are now substantially more likely than before to marry whites.
The numbers also coincide with Pew survey data showing greater public acceptance of mixed marriage, coming nearly half a century after the Supreme Court in 1967 barred race-based restrictions on marriage. (In 2000, Alabama became the last state to lift its unenforceable ban on interracial marriages.) About 83 percent of Americans say it is "all right for blacks and whites to date each other," up from 48 percent in 1987. As a whole, about 63 percent of those surveyed say it "would be fine" if a family member were to marry outside their own race.
Mass Wedding: 3,000 Couples Tie the Knot in Ciudad Juárez
Minorities, young adults, the higher educated and those living in Western or Northeast states were more likely to say mixed marriages are a change for the better for society. The figure was 61 percent for 18- to 29-year-olds, for instance, compared to 28 percent for those 65 and older.
Due to increasing interracial marriages, multiracial Americans are a small but fast-growing demographic group, making up about 9 million, or 8 percent of the minority population. Together with blacks, Hispanics and Asians, the Census Bureau estimates they collectively will represent a majority of the U.S. population by mid-century.
"Race is a social construct; race isn't real," said Jonathan Brent, 28. The son of a white father and Japanese-American mother, Brent helped organize multiracial groups in southern California and believes his background helps him understand situations from different perspectives.
Brent, now a lawyer in Charlottesville, Va., says at varying points in his life he has identified with being white, Japanese and more recently as someone of mixed ethnic background. He doesn't feel constrained with whom he socially interacts or dates.
"Race is becoming a personal thing. It is what I feel like I am," he said.
According to the Pew report, more than 25 percent of Hispanics and Asians who married in 2010 had a spouse of a different race. That's compared to 17.1 percent of blacks and 9.4 percent of whites. Of the 275,500 new interracial marriages in 2010, 43 percent were white-Hispanic couples, 14.4 percent were white-Asian, 11.9 percent were white-black, and the remainder were other combinations.
Still, the share of Asians who intermarried has actually declined recently — from 30.5 percent in 2008 to 27.7 percent in 2010. In contrast, blacks who married outside their race increased in share from 15.5 percent to 17.1 percent, due in part to a rising black middle class that has more interaction with other races.
Intermarriage among whites rose in share slightly, while among Hispanics the rate was flat, at roughly 25.7 percent.
"In the past century, intermarriage has evolved from being illegal, to be a taboo and then to be merely unusual. And with each passing year, it becomes less unusual," said Paul Taylor, director of Pew's Social & Demographic Trends project. "That says a lot about the state of race relations. Behaviors have changed and attitudes have changed."
He noted that interracial marriages among Hispanics and Asians may be slowing somewhat as recent immigration and their rapid population growth provide minorities more ethnically similar partners to choose from. But Taylor believes the longer-term trend of intermarriage is likely to continue.
"For younger Americans, racial and ethnic diversity are a part of their lives," he said.
The Pew study also tracks some divorce trends, citing studies using government data that found overall divorce rates higher for interracial couples. One study conducted a decade ago determined that mixed-race couples had a 41 percent chance of separation or divorce, compared to a 31 percent chance for those who married within their race.
Another analysis found divorce rates among mixed-race couples to be more dependent on the specific race combination, with white women who married outside their race more likely to divorce. Mixed marriages involving blacks and whites also were considered least stable, followed by Hispanic-white couples.
Other findings:
—Broken down by gender, black men were more than twice as likely as black women to marry someone outside their race — 24 percent to 9 percent. The reverse held true for Asian men — 17 percent intermarried, compared to 36 percent among Asian women.
—White-Asian couples who married had the highest median income, nearly $71,000. Behind them were the following race combinations: Asian-Asian ($62,000), white-white ($60,000), white-Hispanic ($57,900), white-black ($53,187), black-black ($47,700) and Hispanic-Hispanic (nearly $36,000).
—The top three states for white-black married couples are Virginia, North Carolina and Kansas, all with rates of about 3 percent.
Based on reporting by the Associated Press.
Sent by John Inclan fromgalveston@yahoo.com












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Armando
Hinojosa has just spent more than a decade of his life building the
largest monument at any state capitol in the nation. The gargantuan 







A
legal expert, a former Navy chaplain, and a pro-family leader agree
that a Pennsylvania judge should be removed from the bench for
throwing out an assault case lodged against a Muslim who attacked an
atheist dressed as a zombie Muhammad at a Halloween parade last year.
Gordon
Klingenschmitt is a former Navy chaplain who was forced out of the
service for publicly praying in Jesus' name while in uniform. He now
runs "
"This
particular judge actually had the audacity to rule in favor of the
attacker, saying that the attacker was compelled to attack this
individual because it was an insult to Islam and the Prophet
Muhammad," Staver reports.
"If
a Christian had been doing the harassing, I don't believe the judge
would have dismissed those charges," Gramley contends. "I
think in this case, Judge Martin is showing preference to the
Muslim."






















"There are literally hundreds of veterans' memorials across the country with religious imagery that we know of; there may be thousands," Sasser estimates. "And the Supreme Court has to take this case, because if they can take this case and rule in favor of this veterans' memorial, that will protect all those veterans' memorials all across the country that may be under attack."





Mom
continued to progress and during high school she took a job working at
Woolworth’s five and ten store.











"The
variation among later European Neanderthals was not even as high as that
of modern humans in Iceland."



Lorenzo
A. Ramirez – a longtime resident of the El Modena neighborhood who
died in 1965 – sued the El Modena school district as part of the
Mendez et al. v. Westminster School District et al. class action
suit when his three sons were denied admission to an all-white
school. 















Los
Islenos Heritage and Cultural Society will celebrate its 36th
annual Isleno Festival March 17–18, 2012 on the grounds of Los
Islenos Museum Complex, 1345 – 1357 Bayou Road in St. Bernard
Village. The Isleno Historic Village, situated in the rear of
Los Islenos Museum, will once more be the setting for a series
of living history demonstrations featuring folk crafts, historic
vernacular lifestyles and the cultural identity of the Isleno
descendants community in St. Bernard Parish. Representatives of
the Houma Nation will prominently figure in Fiesta 2012,
interpreting the history, culture and folk traditions of the
Houma Tribe. Los Cabuqueros de Arucas, a well known traditional
Canarian folk dance group and Los Cebolleros, a Canarian folk
music group, both from Gran Canaria Island, will be featured
cultural performers during Fiesta 2012.


































—Jenna Keith, freshman at The University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill (Father and Grandfather attended Canetuck Rosenwald School in N.C.
Jenna completed her high school graduation project on the benefits of
Rosenwald schools.)
The most shocking comment came from a couple from Austria who approached
me with a look of utter shock.
“What is the line for?” they asked.
“It’s Ash Wednesday,” I responded, “these people are waiting in
line to receive ashes.” Since the two were from a Catholic country, I
figured this was a sufficient amount of information to satisfy their
curiosity. To my surprise the man look at me a bit stupefied. 

