It's kind of odd that you wouldn't consider that in a city that's historically been incredibly racist and segregated by intentional design - to the extent that it should be criminal.
Tray was speaking of the city as a whole. I compared the South Side because the Sox have identified themselves as "Chicago's South Side team" for the last century or so.
You've never seen people compare populations in terms of people of color to white people? It's been literally the standard demographic comparison since 1865.
That wasn't the premise that Tray proposed. I'm not sure how it's relevant. Comparing white and black/hispanic populations was what his post was about.
The Demographic Statistical Atlas of the United States - Statistical Atlas
I live in Bridgeport, and based on my anecdotal experience, it's certainly majority Asian.
The entire list of Southside neighborhoods with a majority white population:
Mount Greenwood - 83.4%
Beverly - 91.3%
Canaryville - 56.3%
If proximity to the park is an indicator of fandom, then it's reasonable to assume Sox fans would lean non-white.
There are more black and hispanic Chicagoans than white. That's just a fact. I'm not sure what that says about the demographics of Sox fans, but proximity seems like a reasonable deduction. It's certainly not a racist one.
That jersey's definitely worth the price of admission.
Even though the team is pure trash, going to the park is still fun. The Sox do a great job at fan experience.
The Sox don't give a s%*# about the idle threats of the fanbase. They're still several years away from "being decent," but Robert definitely won't be part of that. Robert has nobody to blame but himself for the Sox failures.