But what if your roof has been leaking for decades and is about to cave in on your head? Would you want to hang a picture then or get a new roof? That's the position we are at. I mean, the numbers are staggering. You can't possibly believe the black communities are engaging these issues even close to equally? Having worked in areas that are high risk, I can tell ya man, until people end this and attack the unavoidable issues nothing is going to change. We will continue to let the house burn while trying to save a suitcase. The myth of oppression stems from the headlock that one political party has, and has had, over these communities for generations. They could not help solve the problem. So if it is systematic oppression, why do these communities vote the same oppressors back into power?
I'm sorry, I don't want to cast motives, but some of this is just pandering. I know the entire conversation is set up for political motivations, and I think some like you aren't as far left and could be reasonable, but just because you're white doesn't mean you can't comment on black issues in a factual way using data / statistics to prove a crisis worth pursuing. And it just seems that there's a strong element of soft bigotry, which, as a non racist, I find more troubling than a southern kid wearing his confederate flag headed out to shoot some ducks.
I think the issue is all over the place. I think in lots of cases, there are people and groups who have been trying to solve these problems for years but either don't have the means or resources or manpower or support to make it happen (for thousands of reasons).
I also think there are people who don't want it solved (like I mentioned above, usually for personal and political gain).
I also think there are people who believe those issues will be improved if these other things (poverty, education, police relations, etc) are improved and focus their efforts elsewhere but are hoping for the same end result you are.
There are people who don't actually want to do anything and just want to talk because it alleviates them of guilt and makes a social statement.
There are people who believe it's a product of systemic racism and that until racism is solved, that those issues can't be (kind of the reverse stance of what we're talking about, I guess).
So I don't think it's fair to label anyone who's speaking out as one particular thing or act like there's this overarching force trying to keep the situation tumultuous. I think it's mostly well-meaning and well-reasoned people with different ideas, trying different solutions, without the unity and organization it will probably take to fix something of that magnitude. Too many cooks, so to speak.
It's probably a combination of all the factors I mentioned and more, but we aren't in a climate where nuance and discussion is allowed, and the feelings and emotions and opinions are so hot (and getting hotter) that it's just folks trying to talk over each other and call the other side a villain. And that lets the real villains slip through the cracks.