时间:2018-12-07 作者:英语课 分类:2017年VOA慢速英语(七)月


英语课

 


America's population is becoming older and increasingly diverse - made up of people who are different from each other.


Nowhere are those differences more apparent than in Houston, Texas.


The city has seen an increase in the number of minority communities and is being called an example of future demographic changes across the country.


Houston


Houston was once a city with large numbers of whites and Hispanic Americans. Many of the Hispanics have family ties to nearby Mexico or Central American countries.


In 1980, around 52% of the total population was white or Caucasian. By 2010, whites represented about 25% of the total population – which grew from 1.6 million to 2 million in the same time period.


People from around the world came to Houston for one reason, a long time Houston resident told VOA: the chance to make money.


Today, the city claims to be the most diverse in the United States. For many locals, this has created a sense of pride. They feel good about themselves and their hometown.


Nikkie Vasquez lives in Houston.


"I'm Caucasian and my husband is Hispanic, and we have my beautiful mixed babies, and I think here it's welcome, and it's appreciated."


Lee Hsia is a religious leader at Houston's First Baptist Church. He moved to Houston from China when he was seven years old.


The First Baptist Church welcomes people, including non-Christians, from over 35 countries. "We have 'welcome' plastered through the front doors of our church," Hsia said.


Demographic changes


Stephen Klineberg is a founding director at the Kinder Institute for Urban Research at Rice University in Houston. He notes that many whites living in Harris County, which includes Houston, are age 63 or older.


"63-year old Anglos are not going to be making a whole lot more babies. So you can go to the bank on this: no force in the world is going to stop Houston or Texas or America from becoming more African-American, more Asian, more Latino, and less Anglo as the 21st-century unfolds. Nothing in the world can stop that."


The United States Census Bureau gathers detailed information about the nation’s population every 10 years. It also releases population estimates every few years.


The last census, in 2010, showed that whites made up 63.7% of the population nationwide. 2016 estimates show the same group now represents 61.3% of the population.


The Pew Research Center notes the percentage is likely to continue falling in the years to come.


Demographic changes are happening in other areas, too.


For example, the European Commission noted in a 2010 report that European Union countries also are experiencing changes. "Growth is fueled mainly by immigration, whereas the population is becoming older and more diverse,” it said.


Implications of Demographic Changes


Stephen Klineberg says the changes in Houston’s population are likely to continue. He wonders how the city – and the country – will react to future demographic changes. "There is a law of human nature that says what I am familiar with feels right and natural; what I am unfamiliar with feels unnatural, somehow not quite right," he said.


While recent arrivals are working toward the middle class, Klineberg notes a growing underclass of white people with low levels of education. Jobs in industries like coal and steel have disappeared.


"Every community is seeing a growing middle class and a growing underclass, simultaneously," he said. "And that underclass is the great question for the sustainability of Houston and America in the 21st century."


I'm John Russell.


Words in This Story


demographic – adj. of or related to the study of changes in large groups of people


plaster – v. to place on something; to cover over


Anglo – n. short for Anglo-American; a white person


resident – n. someone who lives in a place


underclass – n. a social class made up of people who are poor and have little chance to improve their lives; the lowest social class


sustainability – n. the act of lasting or continuing for a long time



标签: VOA慢速英语
学英语单词
Acacia confusa
address pointer
alternating gradient synchrotron
asymmetrical valley
attribute evaluation rule
bay wreath
booties
bottom sample
brulliement
Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra
bufugly
by the sweat of one's face
canol
capodistria (koper)
carry a project to completion
cerebral-palsied
chargometer
classical network theory
claudius ptolemaeuss
clippin
counterbane
descending development
diaphragm seal flowmeter
diffraction-produced hot spots
disadvance
doerfler
donnets
EDIM
ekuban
electronic feedback
eosinophil colony-stimulating differentiation factor
episquamosal
ESCRP
familial pigmented purpuric eruption
farfalles
fictitious state
gaingiving
halluca
heart trouble
heating blowpipe
Holland cigar
homaliodendron pygmaeum
Huachamacari, Cerro
humiliate
hypnotic therapy
ill-matcheds
in large amounts
iron deficioncy
jet-vane control assembly
kitchentable software
Kokoben
leads and lags
lyubov
medical instrumentation
melanagromyza dolichostigma de meijere
misbranded drugs
monocot genera
mooked
muse on
narrow-mouth bottle
normally distributed observations
on site test
panetelas
penall
picks-off
pildralazine
porosimetric
Portuguese Timor
premonish
pressed on
prophain
pseudo-history
psychological state
quoin
Radošovce
ranariddhs
retentive memory
rewirable connector
right of center
ring-dial
sagination
schnoz
Sintu
sort by priority
sospiro
stability investigation
stand the gaff
summary statement of resources and obligations
tape-oriented system
Thames Yacht Club
titus liviuss
tool bore
topiary tree
ultrasonic sewing
uncravingly
urostege
Van Yen
veliferum
Voreppe
weighted value of a voltage
wind up nowhere
xerophthalmic