The map below depicts demographic majorities of 4th grade public school students by state:

Most states remain majority-white, but the four most populous states do not. Consequently, the nationwide elementary public school population is now majority-minority. Assuming current demographic trends continue, the country will likewise have become majority-minority by the time these students reach middle-aged adulthood.

The following table lists states by the percentage of the 4th grade public school student population that is non-Hispanic white:

State %white 1) Vermont 90 2) West Virginia 89 3) Maine 88 4) New Hampshire 85 5) Montana 79 6) Wyoming 78 7) North Dakota 77 8) Idaho 75 8) Kentucky 75 10) Iowa 74 10) Utah 74 12) South Dakota 73 13) Ohio 69 14) Missouri 68 15) Wisconsin 67 16) Indiana 65 16) Michigan 65 16) Nebraska 65 19) Kansas 63 19) Minnesota 63 19) Pennsylvania 63 22) Oregon 62 23) Tennessee 61 24) Arkansas 60 25) Massachusetts 57 26) Rhode Island 56 27) Alabama 53 27) Colorado 53 29) Connecticut 52 30) Washington 50 31) South Carolina 49 31) Virginia 49 33) Illinois 46 33) North Carolina 46 33) Oklahoma 46 36) Alaska 45 37) Louisiana 44 37) Mississippi 44 39) New York 43 40) Delaware 42 40) New Jersey 42 42) Arizona 41 43) Florida 39 44) Georgia 36 45) Maryland 33 46) Nevada 31 47) Texas 27 48) New Mexico 24 49) California 21 50) Hawaii 13 50) Washington DC 13

Though the Great Replacement is a conspiracy theory only those wishing to be hurled into the void dare discuss, it is hard not to notice that in all of the once reliably red states now in the process of becoming blue–Texas, Georgia, Florida, Arizona, North Carolina–the next generation is majority non-white. It’s almost as though Democrats cannot lose in states where most of the population is not white.