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I don’t care about blacks anymore.

Paul Rojas,
Tulsa, OK.

I’m going to come out and say it…the same thing thousands, probably millions of people in this country are feeling, at this point.

I don’t care about black people’s problems anymore.

Don’t get me wrong, I care very much for the black people I known personally. I care about them as people, as much as whites, Asians, Latinos, and every other human being on earth.

But I no longer care about the special set of issues that many black people hold so near and dear, and that seem to define them as a group…though thankfully, not as individuals.

I’m simply worn out with them. Exhausted by their constant demands, their neediness, their helplessness, their hypocrisy, their never ending problems, their inability to take advantage of the myriad opportunities practically delivered to them, their ungratefulness, their refusal to take responsibility for their own lives or accept the consequences of their actions.

I’ve just thrown in the towel. I can’t keep caring about problems that I obviously can’t do anything about. Especially when they have brought at least some of it on themselves, or when they won’t make the lifestyle changes necessary to succeed or to overcome or avoid their problems.

There comes a point, where I just quit listening. When racist graffiti is discovered on a college campus, or on a black person’s house, my reaction is no longer outrage, disgust, and sympathy for a victim of a hate crime. It’s outrage and disgust alright, and it comes a few days later when it is almost always revealed to be yet another racial hoax perpetrated by black people. I really don’t want to hear them tearfully recounting that heartrending moment when they “discovered” some mean white KKK member had snuck into their laundry room, completely unseen and invisible to video cameras, to scribble “Trump ’16” and “Die niggers” on the wall. At this point, I’ll turn the channel.

I applaud those who are successful, and overcome challenges, and I wish them well. But just like my white colleagues, if they make poor decisions, spend their money foolishly, refuse the free education available to them, have children they can’t afford, get involved in drugs and criminality, I have little sympathy. And I’m not likely to make an effort to be friendly with them or get to know them. I’ll be polite, but I don’t particularly care to associate with them, white or black.

I no longer excuse or rationalize violence, criminality, laziness, indolence, careless babymaking, willful dependency or degeneracy among blacks, any more than I do with whites. If you’re a thief who doesn’t support his child, and spends his days drinking and whining about how his life sucks, your black skin doesn’t get you a pass from me. You’re just as much of a piece of garbage as your fellow white bum. Doesn’t equality feel good?

Perhaps it’s the hyper-sensitivity, the arrogant and unabashed racism toward other races, and the self-entitlement. Could be the willingness to drop everything to riot, loot, burn and destroy personal and public property, menace, threaten and physically attack innocent white people. Or the propensity towards cowardly mob attacks on vulnerable whites, especially the elderly, women, any white person they catch alone and defenseless.

70 years ago or more, white men did beat up or occasionally murder blacks they suspected of wrongdoing…just as they did to other whites who “needed killin'”. Vigilante “justice” was an injustice, nobody argues the point. It was wrong, and the civil rights era exposed these as shameful and reprehensible acts. Black and whites marched together and lobbied their political leaders to put a stop to racial injustice, to shame those guilty of racism, and to codify and enforce equal rights for all. A noble and righteous cause, one which was long overdue.

But here it is 50 years later, the president, attorney general, and a disproportionate percentage of the top government executives are black. The mayors, commissioners, police chiefs, and other local adminstrators in most, if not all, major cities are also black. Black Run America has not brought prosperity to its constituents, rather, its Democratic policies, programs and spending have driven once majestic and prosperous cities into bankruptcy, decay and abandonment.

I just can’t bring myself to feel for the people who scrawl vulgar graffiti on the sides of stately brownstones, or who break the subtly rippled glass that a craftsman, white or black, had carefully glazed in an ornate linteled window a hundred thirty years ago. There’s no part of me that yearns to reach out to people throwing garbage onto what had been a tidy, manicured patch of decorative greenery flanking a grand marble entrance with exquisitely carved doors. I just don’t have it in me, anymore. I do wonder what has become of the respectable, genteel families who were displaced by the social engineering policies of the New Deal, leaving their architectural legacy to the ravages of neglect and deliberate defacement.

I’ve left the “dialogue”, which turned out to be nothing more than a one-sided, accusatory tirade, berating me for unspecified harm I am to bear responsibility for, and denying me the right to respond with my own, civil point of view. There’s simply no point having “the conversation” any longer. You smugly assert that I have no right to my views because I can’t possibly know what it’s like to be black. Yet you claim in the same breath, to be the arbiter, the expert on my own race, and therefore I have no right to speak for myself. So, have your own “dialogue” with yourself. I’m out.

No matter what I do, no matter what I say, you say my whiteness makes me racist. So there is no longer any point in considering it. Fine, you say I’m “racist”. I don’t care anymore.

I’m sure there are those who will say in rebuttal that they are “tired of” being the victims of racism every walking minute of their lives. And to this, I say…”Ok, I am willing to accept that you are being victimized by the inherent racism absorbed by simply being in proximity to white people. But you must accept that my response will be to avoid you, and to decline to involve myself in your issues, lest my whiteness somehow damage you further.”

Allows me to celebrate my birthday

Nathaniel Hunt
Glen Burnie, MD

My parents are an interracial couple. I am a homosexual young man. And today is my 23rd birthday. Without the Civil Rights Movement, my parents would not have had the courage or approval to find, love, and marry each other. Without it, I may never have been born and if I was born, I would have to choose a family: that of my Caucasian mother or of my African American father. It allowed the conversation of “equality for all” to expand exponentially into sexual orientation in today’s society. So that I can marry my own “Prince Charming” one day. It allowed me to be here today in a public place unafraid of my races and of who I am; proud of my parents. It was not just an event that happened in a text book. It was a single drop in a vast lake that is still continuing to ripple in our lives today.

I’m white I’m not white trash

Madison,
West Bloomfield, MI.

I don’t have much to say. But I am a white girl, and I have been called white trash before, I walk into a public place and people my age who I have never met before start whispering and laughing at me, I had just happened to hear the phrase “white trash” and I have nothing else to assume than they were calling me that. I really didn’t know what to think at the time and I really didn’t know that it meant. I knew it wasn’t nice but I didn’t know that it meant an underprivileged or skanky white person. and they decided to call me that when they have no clue who I am or who I spend time with. The people who called me that happened to be black but I believe that people should embrace their race and not care what other people think. I’m white…not white trash.

Dating Bi-Racially Has Changed My Life

Erika,
USA.

I am a white woman that is dating a black man. I tried to think racism didn’t exist anymore until I started dating my boyfriend. The stares we’ve gotten from white people while in public, the comments we’ve gotten from older white folks, and even the responses of friends have made me realize that racism still exists. I’m embarrassed that I didn’t know this fact until I was on the other side of racism. When I was the one getting stared at and receiving the heat from dating somebody of a different race. Friends have told me as if they were making me feel better, “Well that’s okay that the two of you are dating because at least he doesn’t act black!” I don’t know why people think it’s okay to say that. I take these comments and responses personally.

She is just some white girl

Brooke,
Richmond, VA.
Virginia Commonwealth University

Racism goes all sorts of ways. My race shouldn’t define everything about me, and definitely shouldn’t generalize me as a person. My race shouldn’t decide how I get treated in public or how much I get paid. My race should not put me above or below anyone, and it should not make me feel uncomfortable. So why does it? Why does our society still condone these absurd types of judgements? How can you judge someone so quickly based on just simply even the color of their skin? Race is senseless.

#VCU

What’s with this white guilt?

Kassie
Rockford, IL

White people bashing other white people for being white? I see, mostly on facebook, these extreme left wing people publicly displaying how white people are the reason for racism, only white people can be racist, all PoC are entirely exempt from any and all forms of racism! Yes, let’s blame whitey. You just can’t treat everyone as equal, can you? I think it’s insulting; these people thinking that PoC need them. And, let’s be honest, it’s all about public appearance. “Look how not racist I am!” Oh, what martyrs they are! Because a group of white people preaching about how terrible they all are is really getting sh*t done. Your facebook posts are changing lives! Get over yourself. This isn’t about you. How stupid, that white people think becoming segregated among each other will unite the races. By the way, I am white, and I refuse to apologize for the color of my skin. I would never ask a black man or a brown man or any man to apologize for something outside of their control, and I think upholding everyone to the same standard is the first step in stopping racism. This white bashing whites is just amplifying the issue.

Preference for white doesn’t mean racist

Jann Patterson
Hayden, ID

The major bad things that have happened to me were because of black people. I was mugged by a group of black teens and my son had a gun held to his head at work by a pair of black thieves. I am afraid of black people that I don’t know well and I would not approach a black person accept in a public place. I notice color and I don’t apologize for that. Black people notice color too. They openly voted for Obama simply because he’s black, but they are not called racist. I voted against Obama by voting for Romney because of Obama’s policies. I am called racist by some because I did not vote for Obama even though I consider myself a democrat. I did not vote for Obama the first time because he’s black. I did not vote for Obama the second time because he isn’t doing a good job.

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