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In 2000, just three states — California, Hawaii and New Mexico — had less than a 50% white population.
Hawaii has never had a majority white population, while in the 2000 US Census, the white population was 46% in California and 45% in New Mexico.
Then by 2020, according to the most recent census, the white population in Maryland also had dropped to 47%, 46% in Nevada and 40% in Texas.
Now the next two decades are set to see further drastic demographic shifts.
By 2050, an additional 10 US states are forecast to see white people become a minority.
They include New York, where the white population will drop to 46%, New Jersey at 37%, Connecticut, 45%, Delaware, 47%, Florida, 39%, Georgia, 37%, Arizona, 43%, Illinois, 49%, Oklahoma, 49%, and Washington, 49%.
The forecast trends are set to continue, too, with white people becoming a minority or close to a minority in a total of 24 states by 2060.
Some of those shifts involve Alaska, where white people will drop to 50% of the population by 2060, Louisiana at 51%, Massachusetts, 46%, Minnesota, 51%, Mississippi, 51%, North Carolina ,49%, Rhode Island, 47%, and Virginia, 47%.
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The post Non-Whites Set to Become Majority in US for First Time by 2050 — With NY, NJ and Conn. Reflecting Same Change appeared first on American Renaissance.
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