As I said, it's far more complicated than you're every going to be able to get your head around. So, I'll just leave you with single sentences.
Afraid of having your worldview shattered?
Not at all.
Just part of my "worldview" is that when people come on here and they write in short sentences with no content, they're usually just looking for some entertainment.
I'm more than capable of having a debate especially on the topic of race issues in america.
Then let's see if my instincts were correct or not.
Some of the main reasons why black people are having such a difficult time are:
Number one: Everything boils down to number one eventually. The way the political system is set up. There are two political parties. This is clearly not enough for the difference of opinions and lives out there in the USA.
You have the Republican Party who clearly don't represent people in poverty, even if they manage to convince them to get votes. The Democrats come across as the party of the poor, and the party of minorities, but they're simply not doing this job at all. There really is no other choice out there. Only 54.7% of people eligible to vote bothered to do so. This is pathetic and shows that many people feel neither party offers them anything. When only 20% of the people actually really get to vote for the President anyway, in 12 states, you can understand this.
The problem we saw in the election is that the candidates went after those people who could swing the election, and that was a limited number of people. In a system where everyone's vote counts, then different parties would appeal to these different demographics, and they'd push for their rights, for dealing with their problems. But the two main parties don't, because they don't need to.
Number two on my list is:
The attitude of America. The expression "Everyone can make it in America", it might be true to a certain extent, the problem is that not everyone can make it at the same time. If one person makes it, like Lebron James, there will be thousands of failures. To simply dismiss dealing with problems because you believe that everyone can make it, is causing the US a lot of problems.
Number three is:
Partisan politics. Maybe this is number one, as partisan politics is a result of having two political parties. But partisan politics seems to make winning the politics more important than standing up for any principles that someone might actually have.
Number four is:
The rich and the politicians working together to make sure the politicians get rich and the rich get richer. The Koch brothers getting the Supreme Court (I wonder which justices made it rich out of that one) to allow unlimited spending on politics is killing the US. It's not just the Koch brothers spending, but they're spending the most, and they're forcing people like Soros to up his spending too.
They spend a lot of money on advertising. Literally telling people what to think. People buy McDonalds because of advertising, and they buy the political message because of advertising too. The Koch brothers have stopped looking to the man at the top as the most important person. They're looking at the message. Get the message out and into people's heads, then the people will vote for the people you want them to vote for.
This means that the issues getting into politics aren't the issues that people actually would care about if they were somewhere else, what they think is important is what they're told to think is important.
With the case of the protests, how much money do you think is going into telling people on both sides what to think?