Not at all! As a matter of fact, there’s a wonderful family living a few doors down from me. They have beautiful kids who play with the neighborhood kids, swim, ride bikes, and go to school together. Likewise, the father is a businessman and the mother a teacher. They pay their taxes, go to association meetings, and help out around the community. I have no problem with any of them, and I’ve even been to barbecues at their place. If every black family in this country could be like them, I’d be all for complete an total integration.
The problem is that there are so many welfare mentality blacks in this country who disdain the “white” lifestyle, they think it better to live in the slums where whites won’t go and live their lives off of our tax dollars. Until the government does away with all forms of welfare, the blacks in America will continue to be enslaved. We have a right to pursue happiness... it’s not guaranteed to us.
There would be no welfare if there weren't a demand. We let Big Brother control us through carrots and sticks. This isn't any sort of mentality by race, it is a liberal mentality. People of all races are enslaved by Liberalism and the only way to be free is for them as individuals to wake up and say no, I'm not going to accept your carrot. The government only supplies what there is a demand for.
People do segregate themselves geographically though, to be part of the culture that best suits them. That is why we have Chinatown, Japantown, Little Saigon.
If a black family shared the values and culture of my community, I would be happy to have them as neighbors. My values are basically God, Family, Country, in that order. Not so hard. And equally so, the Section 8 culture would not be welcome.
I'm not racist. Some of my best friends are (fill in the blank).
There are whites with the same kind of mentality. The best example was when I worked at a concert venue. My co-workers were such a melting pot that the only time the issue of race came up was to joke around with each other. Generally, I didn’t even notice their race as much. Srtiously.
Then, there were the rap concerts. The people that came through those doors were so animalistic. It didn’t matter if it was a black guy or a white guy. They just had this certain air about them. “ghetto” is what I called it.