It's indirectly related to racism, in that racism ~started~ it, and now the repercussions or shell of what it is today is kind of a problem in itself. Like, the Iraq war via 2009 in relation to whatever reason we were there...we were nation building at that point in order to leave, whereas in the 'hood we're not doing any nation-building, we're just arresting people. It's treating the symptoms, not the disease.CID1990 wrote:It certainly does contradict what you say. You directly attributed the fact that police spend an inordinate amount of time in black neighborhoods as a function of racism. You butt up against first hand experience on a subject like this and your M.O. is to play the "I'd answer if only... X."youngterrier wrote:
I don't deny anything you say, it doesn't even contradict what I'm talking about, and I would go on (police force prescence is a lot like occupation, the area is more dangerous no doubt, you're more likely to stop wrong-doers, and the people don't like you but the politicians need you there) but you guys don't care to hear me talk about it more, because you hold an affinity for ~long posts~, so I'll spare you the boredom.
Sent from the center of the universe.
so, in other words, post-civil-rights-era didn't evaporate discrimination, wealth/capital discrepancies, and other such problems that permeated and still permeate in black communities. Legal recognition of the African American community as equal human beings didn't evaporate the prejudices of the populace. And a nucleus of wealth to lift a demographic that has long been exploited does not develop in a couple generations, nor will it manifest itself fast if that demographic is not targeted in terms of reducing poverty.
So, the reason why there are as many problems as there are in black neighborhoods and the police presence there and so on is related to racism by neglecting to address problems within the community after the establishment shat on them for so many years.