Due to economic constraints, Blacks are far more likely to live in areas of high crime than their White counterparts.
The statistics many you seem so happy to fall back on, suggest that arrests are a real reflection of crimes committed. If that were so then a crime wouldn't be a crime unless you were caught.
I have been arrested 2 times both when I was a young man. Once for theft and then again for burglary. Neither crime was committed by me and in both cases, I was able to prove my innocence. I say prove myself innocent because the police were intent on laying the blame on me. Even though at the time the crimes were committed I was in employment and making a very good living. Even though I co-operated with the police investigation in the case of the burglary, the police insisted on repeatedly showing up at my place of employment. This resulted in me losing my job and shortly afterwards my home. I found the culprit of the crime shortly afterwards, after all, I had nothing better to do and nowhere to live. I wanted answers while the police just wanted a conviction.
Once I had solved the crime, I asked the officers to contact the employers who had just fired me. Their response was it was not their concern. It took me many years to recover from the mess they'd made of my life. The way policing of poor Blacks neighbourhoods completely different to rich Whites. Respect goes right out the window when most officers address Black folks. Protect & Serve becomes Oppress & Intimidate. Better to resist arrest in the street where there might be witnesses to your innocence than submit and be taken somewhere to be tortured away from prying eyes. Because we are in the minority here, we all have had experiences of such treatment or related to someone who has. Policing and the court system decimates Black families and our communities. Causing economic constraint and hindering progress. It's not by accident, it's by design.
Edited by
Unknow
on Mon 04/17/17 05:19 PM