I wonder if his hate for white people stem from his dad leaving his mom for a white woman.
The Dallas police chief story is interesting too. The police chief is black. His son shot and killed a cop and another person before he was killed by police officers. The problem lies in the black youth culture. You want to solve the problem. You fix that. It also weird that the shooter would target a police department led by a black police chief.
Originally Posted by dallasfan
There is some truth to this. Young black men aren't used to being 'coached', or having a male authority figure over them. Their loser dad left the family after donating sperm to mom (they grow up and do the same shit to young girls), and the males in that family grow up without 'guy' direction. They turn to the streets.
I used to be like that. When I was a kid, I'd see guys my age who had dads. They would get 'called in' to the house at dark, they couldn't ALWAYS go out and play. I always thought their dads were just being a d-bag, but it wasn't always the case. 14 and 15 I'm in the club, drinking beer and shit, trying to hang with the big boys. I've seen too many fights and even a few shootings in the club scene, that I had no business in.
I got lucky, in the sense that I had a good moral base, even without a measurable father figure. I avoided things that led to trouble and a criminal record. I've learned a lot things on my own, but I should've learned them sooner. Having a dad in place would've made that possible.
Young black boys and men many times don't understand the process of authority and hierarchy. They hate male school teachers, principals, or anyone who tries to assert on them. That's "disrespecting" them in their eyes, so they're defiant, at an age where they should be learning to become men. Many times, the first time they see any REAL authority is encounters with policemen.
Too often, at this point it's too late to learn authority, especially if the cop has already made up his mind that he's a n*-hating bastard.