It's because almost all of the major X-Men, the ones that people really want to see, are white. It's kind of a problem.
I want to see the original five (plus Havok and Polaris) as close to how they were in the 60s comics as possible...
...the next wave (Storm, Colossus, Wolverine, Nightcrawler, Thunderbird, Banshee & Sunfire) were all from different countries and backgrounds and i don't think changing the ethnicity of any of them would work...
From the later additions, Bishop and Gateway would be my first choices to add ethnic diversity, and there are other characters where a change in ethnicity might work ..... (Dazzler or Longhsot are my first thoughts there) ... but in general later x-men characters all have a lot of established cultural background that it takes away from the character to change.
Sure the original class come from somewhat more privileged backgrounds and and are all white, but is that not reflective of society and how the problems of the past have fed the present? Wouldn't it be papering over the cracks in the real world to dilute representation of that?
March 29, 2016; Washington Post
The U.S. Supreme Courts ruling in Brown v. Board of Education, in tandem with the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Elementary and Secondary School Act of 1965, abolished the legalized separation of white and black students. But fifty years after passing this legislation, segregation still very much exists today in private schools according to a recent study by the Southern Education Foundation.
The Washington Post published a snapshot of the Southern Education Foundations findings, which say in part:
Private schools are whiter than the overall school-age population in most states, particularly in the South and the West.
Black, Latino, and Native American students are underrepresented in private schools, also particularly in the South and West.
Private schools are more likely than public schools to be virtually all-white, defined as a school where 90 percent or more of students are white. Forty-three percent of the nations private school students attended virtually all-white schools, compared to 27 percent of public-school students.
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