Black Culture is in Shambles
This is the first of a “What we can’t talk about” series.
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Black culture is in shambles. In its current state, beyond being a shameful disgrace in many ways, black culture is a large burden to the American people and a parasitic rot to this greatest of nations. This is statistically and observationally true. Blacks wildly outperform in Government Handouts, Murder, Violent Crime, Burglary, and other things that degrade society, like being loud on buses. (the last part is a Shane Gillis quote to have some fun) Yes, we can have fun while discussing issues we are all being lied to about.
A society begins to fail when it codifies a lack of objectivity into law. E.g.: there is a group of restaurants that share a building near where I live. They were effectively shut down due to the ensuing crime that followed black teens, making it their hang-out. A year later, there was a reopening with security who would not allow unaccompanied kids in. A few weeks later, I watched as two affluent 16-year-old white girls were turned away from getting a smoothie. Even the security guard knew how crazy it was; he was kind and apologetic. A proper society would put the blame where the blame is due. Black culture. Am I advocating for discriminating against race? No. I am advocating for being objective, and if it is about race then so be it. If you are against discrimination, you would be against what happened to those two young girls who were being discriminated against because of their age. What I am saying is that in the real world… not fantasy land… there will always be discrimination, and a healthy society wouldn’t get heartburn about pursuing increased accuracy and, therefore, decreased discrimination. If you have a problem with what I am saying then you are promoting less poignant discrimination. Every society should pursue being as accurate as possible with discrimination, the goal being to target ONLY the guilty individuals. But where this isn’t possible, we should prefer narrowing the targeting to those who deserve it.
You are morally inferior, not superior, for preferring less accurate discrimination. Shame on you. Grow up and grow a pair.
“But we can’t do that.” We should ask ourselves why? There isn’t a non-butt-hurt reason.
WHERE ELSE IS BEING HONEST AND OBJECTIVE A BAD THING?!
Let me be brutally clear about this next point: The ONLY reason you have a problem with what I am suggesting is that you can’t tell the difference between your own mind and what you have been told to think. You have a captured will and, therefore, can be jerked around to many an end.
We are not allowed to notice the obvious reality of Black culture, and it is killing them. Black people are hurt the MOST by our society’s lack of backbone to be honest about the fruits of their actions. I would argue our collective subsidization has subjugated black folks far more than Jim Crow or other outward oppressions. We owe it to the awesome might of our black communities to be honest about the stain they currently are to our shared world.
Honesty is the ONLY way toward admission and then change. We aren’t going to lie our way to the truth. We aren’t going to deceive our way to sound thinking. We aren’t going to obscure or a way to clarity. We aren’t going to shifting sands our way to a strong foundation, etc forever.
Current state, the bad far outweighs the good. All the Rap, Jazz, and soul food doesn't make up for the murder, thieving, and violence. I would love to keep and elevate the good and get rid of the bad. So should you. That starts with being honest. Today, our institutions refuse to be the next step toward a solution. It is up to us.
I feel a very keen sorrow for black people who are charging forward ahead and away from the degeneracy of black culture. You carry the burden of DEI and all the other bullshit. You have to live with the rot of black culture like the rest of us, and, at times, have the undue pressure of being blamed for it. My heart most sincerely goes out to you. You have my deepest and most profound respect. This one is for you. From where I sit, we owe it to you, first and foremost, to do what is right: be honest and take steps toward a reconstitution of black culture.
Without fear or favor, any honest reflection on black culture’s current state shows it to be: Trash. And honestly, if anything, that is too nice of a way to put it
There is no happy ending. Yet. For now, we should sit in the heavy and saddening truth. I know it is hard. I know it sucks. It is what it is.