I agree with your proposition to hold black people accountable for their actions, both individually and as a group.
But I can’t help but notice a greater cause of the problem—social engineering focused on racial division as perpetrated by the “cunning, ambitious and unprincipled men” George Washington warned us about in his farewell address of 1796. A concrete example of their deeds is the removal prayer and the Bible from public schools in the early 1960s. Less concrete but equally influential changes includes the encouragement of alcohol and drug use among blacks, as well as the enabling of prostitution, pornography and general debauchery.
Very possible.
I come down very hard in favor of that, and for very good reasons. That easily constitutes the establishment of a State Religion, which is very intelligently prohibited by the Constitution.
My personal experience with prayer and Bible study goes like this: I was raised in Colorado, where prayer was not led in public schools. We moved to Kentucky in 1962 where prayer and Bible study WAS done. Each day they had a "devotional time" where a student was picked to read from the Bible and say a prayer. The kids made a mockery of it, snickering and laughing and offering up smart-ass remarks during the readings.
Not only that. I am an LCMS Lutheran; and, we are very particular about our doctrine. Most of the kids and teachers in the South are Southern Baptist. The conflict between their interpretations and mine were significant and terribly important. I was relieved when that was legislated out of existence, and would be distressed if it came back.
Public schools have no reason to teach religion in any fashion save as history and background information on historical events. In order to be done correctly, religious teaching belongs in the homes and in the churches.
The moral decadence you observe in today's society is strictly a reflection upon parents, home life, and the trend to stay out of church. None of that is a result of taking "mockery services" out of schools.
From another angle, if you don't like the way schools teach regular topics, would you actually want them to teach your kids about the Salvation of their soul? Seems like very poor planning.
If I've posted this once, I've posted it a million times.