" Today, at MacArthur Station, an African American Man in his native
" garb pushing a cart, who was at the end of the line, just zoomed in
" and got in front of everyone and got on, even before people had the
" chance to get off the train. There were at least a dozen persons
" waiting ahead of him to get on but he felt that he was entitled to
" go in first because he's a prince of an African nation or something.
As long as there's seperate standards for African Americans/Blacks and
the rest of everyone else, blacks will feel entitled to do all sorts
of things wrong. Unfortunately, Sharpton, the Muslims, and racist
whites (usually the "progressive" type) have strongly instilled in
blacks the sense that they are extremely seperate from the rest of
society, and as a result, they are (seperate).
The best you can do, is to stop racism when you have the safe
opportunity to do so, by getting blacks to be incremently less racist.
It will take more than our lifetimes, so take a very long view. But
indeed, if you occasionally do a little thing here and there to that
end, it will very powerfully advance the issue (one small step at a
time). I've many times changed society and social norms all
throughout the country (and less often, the world) using these means,
so I know each individual can have a great impact (for progress, if
that's what you're trying to achieve). Of course, many others are
doing the same thing, so you have to really think hard to figure out
how lasting your particular change will be, and try to craft a
microchange that will be foundational, useful, relevent, helpful and
lasting. Usually this requires you to honestly understand your change
far better, and to honestly assess whether it's a correct change in
the first place, since the evolution of change tends to remove a lot
of the crap outright, and very often being honest to yourself is
EXTREMELY difficult. For instance, most trains are no good. That's
a hard lesson to a choo choo head. (I love trains, by the way --
who wouldn't -- all that metal! But they are not in any way useful
to human transportation, except for the ovens during purges, and
in wars being treated like cattle.)
One of the biggest things you yourself can do to stop black racism is
to not give them unique, special, seperate or superior access,
opportunity or treatment. If you consciously blind your outward
attitude and actions, it will usually blindside them and they will
want to fight you, but if you shell up (harden your exterior), then
that will come off as a compromise between becoming more like them
(the hardening) and treating them the same as everyone else. But,
then you have to bring it back to yourself, by not being a badass
hardass, and being a civil member of society. It is not actually
possible to do in any sort of "correct" way, but it's a sort of set of
thoughts that can allow you to strategically handle some situations in
a manner in which you can think of ways to treat them as "equals", or
at least not "specially", and find ways to do so safely that make them
really think hard about how to become less racist. More often than
not, they will refuse to be unracist, prefering to be special and
seperate, but sometimes on the fringes they will not be that way.
Where you find blacks that aren't racist tend to be in mixed municipal
settings in the case of school children that are subsumed and
assimilitated into the mass culture of public schools. This doesn't
always work, but sometimes the children will not be racist, or at
least less racist, until they get older and have to meet the realities
of the real world (parents, family, neighbors, welfare, gangs, and
employment).