It's more purple than it's been at roughly any point in my life, but yeah, on the net it's still fairly red. That said, texas isn't so much southwest as south, period. The thing's bloody huge. Chunks are southwest, south, (barely) southeast (I'm about as southeast as you get without actually being in south/central florida, and the far east bits of texas are a day trip for me if I'm feeling real frisky), probably midwest... seriously, texas may be pretty empty on the whole but it's friggin' gigantic.
People would talk about "poor people" as a kind of euphemism for black people (since blacks in the area were generally poorer) but really did not seem to understand what it was like to actually be poor.
This, though... I'd say a lot of it isn't really not understanding what it's like to be poor. Again, poverty and demographics being what it is* in a lot of these areas, there's very much a sizable white population that is
entirely ruddy aware of what it's like to actually be poor, full on dirt floor poverty (seriously, I've had family in the education system help out the occasional white student living like that over the years), because they've been living it often enough for generations. The realities of what poverty entails are something rather intensely felt by a great deal of non-minority southerners, heh.
More what's going on there, imo, is just some kind of... disconnect? Like, you question individual things regarding a person's economic status, and everything will come up poor as shit, and either no better or outright worse than conditions in the more worse off predominately black/etc. neighborhoods in the region. Try to get folks to acknowledge they're in roughly the same situation as a ghettocritter or dealing with effectively or literally the same problems as the local black areas and you get stonewalled. It's normalized for 'em, for want of a better way of putting it. The stuff involved with that are either no major issue or outright virtue when a white feller's doing it, but spat on when it's not. That conditions and issues shared are near enough to identical it barely makes a difference is danced around at best, but that they're shared isn't really questionable. Right down to the bureaucratic corruption white people around here like to accuse black gov't staff of, heh.
You kinda' get the feeling that richer folks seem to think that poverty is some kind of equalizer or somethin', sometimes, I guess? That racist pathos would be less when people are getting shat on to the same-ish degree. And like, heeeellllllll naw. You might be rotting in a trailer park and on five different kinds of government assistance but at least you ain't black and you ain't
admitting you're on the dole even if it's the only thing keep your kids fed and sheltered. Buncha' stuff like that. Hard to articulate much better at twenty 'til five in the morning, ahaha.
* Town I've spent much my life in is like 40% below the line, and had a census a few years back memorable for finding a black population of 1, ferex. Not 1
percent. Literally one dude, out of a population of a few hundred. Something like maybe a dozen anything else non-white. Plenty of folks 'round these parts that make an idle hobby of pissing on poor people that are, in fact, themselves poor people, and just have a great deal of trouble quite making the connection that they're pissing on their own foot in the process.
E: It's a representative example, but I had family (finally, they kinda' needed it pretty badly) get on food stamps in the last few months. Discussion among others basically amounted to, "They got it." and nothing else. No comment on virtue, no repudiation, no etc., so forth, so on. Just a fact, basically. Thing that happens, no need for anything else said. Meanwhile you talk about a local non-white family getting the same thing and the discussion likes to end up rather differently. System exploitation and abuse, trading steak for drugs, etc., etc. The usual passel of shite.