Black people a hundred years or so ago were dignified, proud, and noble. Things weren't perfect in America, especially for them. But they held their heads high in spite of it. They knew they had come a long way in still a relatively short period of time and they were determined to go even further.
And then came along leftists like Lyndon Johnson, and the "Great Society" that put the black race back in chains. But it was even WORSE this time. Now they were held in spirit and soul to a system that offered no dignity or nobility whatsoever. Black people lost their pride until now...
...well, until now when too many of them have been reduced to the level of lawless animals bereft of all constraint and basic morality.
There can be no reasoning with such people. Neither can anyone from the white race or any other try to persuade them about their plight. It's going to take black people themselves to step up to and rein in the monsters among them.
Was Scott Adams right? It does not look good.
“Was Scott Adams right? It does not look good.”
He was and is ABSOLUTELY RIGHT.
The best thing for both races is separation, as in separate nations, each free to pursue their own destinies.
The group dynamics are such that two groups of people whose members are easily identifiable as belonging to one or the other group and whose AVERAGE group IQs are significantly different will never be able to peacefully coexist together.
A sad reality, but a reality nonetheless. And until that separation happens things are only going to get worse for both races.
The European have no idea the grief they’re buying themselves by importing millions of africans in their formerly white countries.
I don't know about 100 years ago but 60-70 years ago - and well before the Great Society - the problems were there. From a 1958 TIME Magazine article:
"They are afraid to say so in public, but many of the North’s big-city mayors groan in private that their biggest and most worrisome problem is the crime rate among Negroes.
"In 1,551 U.S. cities, according to the FBI tally for 1956, Negroes, making up 10% of the U.S. population, accounted for about 30% of all arrests, and 60% of the arrests for crimes involving violence or threat of bodily harm—murder, non-negligent manslaughter, rape, robbery and aggravated assault. In one city after another, the figures—where they are not hidden or suppressed by politicians—reveal a shocking pattern."