So in your mind there just can't be no black trash doing the same things eh racist ? If you could stop being so racist, someone might like some of your points made, but that ain't happening is it ?
You work on the assumption I care if people like what I say or not.
I am sure there are a lot of blacks who engage in bad behavior, but it's not like we reward the ones who engage in "good" behavior. I know black folks who hold down jobs, served in the military, take care of their families, and they are still regularly pulled over by the cops for a "Driving While Black".
As one quipped, "It's no sin to be born black, but sometimes it's damned inconvenient."
Why did they backslide ???? Is there no truth to what Martin Luther King's words were, when he spoke about a person's character being of the utmost importance over ones skin color???? We're the blacks all these upstanding characters in which white culture wanted intermingled within their culture early on or way back then or did the blacks themselves have alot of transformations to do over the years, as well as the whites also before the two became better balanced with one another ???? Are whites totally to blame for it all up to this point ??? Do you think whites by a majority should embrace the thug culture that exist amongst the blacks today, and if they reject it then are they racist in your mind ???
Was there a coherent thought in there somewhere?
The problem seems to be, "Why are some black validating racist views if one doesn't look at statistics."
Reality- most adult blacks have jobs. Yes, black unemployment is higher than white unemployment, because, you know, racism, but the vast majority of African American adults do have jobs. Conversely, the majority of people on "welfare'* are white.
ANd when I say "Welfare", i mean entitlements to assist poor people, not payments made to middle class white people who are too stupid to realize Social Security and Medicare and Unemployment are government programs someone else is paying for.
Now, as far as the "Thug Culture", the problem there isn't a race one, it's a cultural one. Every generation thinks the one that preceeded it were a bunch of old people with messed up values, and the one that follows it is soft and has no sense of responsibility or hard work.
Of course, none of this has anything to do with the thought of this thread... and that is, should we continue to honor men who started a racist civil war in order benefit a few rich people.