Actually they are probably not responsible for their reprehensible behavior .... they were raised by rich families that did not teach them specifically not to sing racist song on buses where cell phones were present and their might be a bottom feeder ready for 15 minutes of fame.
Who are we to judge the oppression these two young men faced while growing-up on the mean streets of Highland Park?
Think of the danger and humiliation they faced when their dads bought them a measly BMW 5 Series for their 16th birthdays rather than the BMW 6 Series.
“Actually they are probably not responsible for their reprehensible behavior .... they were raised by rich families that did not teach them specifically not to sing racist song on buses where cell phones were present and their might be a bottom feeder ready for 15 minutes of fame.”
Since I don’t personally know the SAE members involved I’m not going to comment on their particular upbringings.
I will say that living in Austin since the 80s I’ve known known more than a few frat boys and I can say that the majority of the one’s I’ve met have a very strong sense of entitlement.
I really think the sense of entitlement is probably more in play than racism.
The ones I’ve known said some pretty racist things but only in the company of a large group of their brothers.
Individually they weren’t bad at all, but in a group they seemed to try to outdo each other.
I noticed that bigger the group, the more that sense of entitlement and mob mentality came out.
Really, it doesn’t seem like the person who recorded the video got any fame out of it. It seems the bottom feeders in this incident were the ones portrayed on video.