How do you know they aren't?Tyrannical wrote:It's a shame that American Blacks can't use the Trayvon killing as a reason to self-reflect on their behavior and why they are perceived as a threat.
According to reports I've read, Trayvon Martin was apparently moved from one of the worst inner city schools, with a 50% graduation rate, to a better school with an 80% graduation rate, because his mother saw some of the inner city cultural problems and did the best she could to get him out of there. And when he got suspended, she sent him to live in a more middle class, mixed race, neighborhood, where he might develop some better habits. It actually sounds to me like she was taking your advice.
However, it is possible that this worked to his detriment in the new situation. Maybe in his original neighborhood, someone of a different race following you was a sign that a gang was watching you, and the appropriate response would be to beat up the guy following you so they'd learn to respect you. And maybe this case is an example of how that acculturation backfired on Martin in an actual middle class neighborhood.
If that's true, maybe if he hadn't been followed, he would have had the time to change his acculturation and gain more constructive middle class habits. You can hardly expect blacks to reject the destructive aspects of inner city black culture if the result is that they get killed.
Your advice may be good advice, but nonblacks need to help out by facilitating the transition you suggest by treating people of all races with respect. If you're going to make a judgement, make it based on the individual, not based on the individual's race.