Renmei said:
whyareblacksstillatverybottom/crazyexgfstuff
Anyone can have an opinion, just don't expect the really insensitive ones to be taken very seriously by everyone. Your tone implies that you feel obligated to share these statements with us. But when the root of your message is that black people should just forget centuries of active suppression, and if it affected them negatively, it was because they allowed it to? I'm sure they allowed those people not to give them jobs or sell them homes as recentlt as 20 years ago. And when evidence of systematic discrimination is still found, for those people unaware of why they didn't even get an interview, let alone a job; I'm sure if they knew, they'd still allow it to affect them. They want to be victims after all. If all one has to do for economic equality is say "I'm taking responsibility for myself. I won't let the past hold me back.", great. All the good intent in the world still can't prevent a broken back. But I admire your optimism, good luck, and try and get a head start, running from that invisible hand.
Immigrant groups trend towards being insular, they also deliberately keep their resources within the community to help elevate members into business and home ownership. They help each other within their community, to make that community stronger, and often maintain strong supportive ties with their homelands.
Immigrant groups generally aren't trolled(latino exception), and don't have a historical stigma tied to them like black communities do, but there are some similarities.
(Brown ppl steal our jerbs, black ppl steal our women, tvs, manhood) Black communities used to excel at the above things mentioned, community chests and the like, back when they were only allowed to live in small insular circles anyway. It doesn't happen as much, there used to be mens groups and church groups that the communities centered around but that infrastructure didn't seem to make it past the 80s-90s. A jackass might(and has) blame social services for this, but I'd blame the Drug War, the stalled economy, and its subsequent assault on black America and resulting breakup of the black family. Drug war never stopped, and only half the Clinton presidency had the economy looking up.
Today all Americans are expected to stand on their own. Communities are broken up. Neighbors don't even speak to each other. Everyone works their job, makes their pay, and goes home. That's modern life. Very few people do it like their grandfathers did. But some communities are more affected by that lack than others. Especially when it made up for what those communities were prevented from having in the first place.