I don't know what your underlying thoughts are on this subject, but if I think I'm on the same page with you, the conversation you're seeking to have can't be had on here. I mean it can, but it won't be productive.
Yeah you’re right.
Since you seem to be a little less triggered and more logical I’ll expand on my
theory
Post 1970. It has become less common for all American males to wear suits on a daily basis. The suit has become the uniform of the “professional”. A man with a certain level of status, economic standing and influence.
Back in the day everyone wore suits and often a hat. It was status quo for even working class folks. Brothers wore suits in strip clubs and dog tracks
Now it has a different stigma. (Importance, power, influence, ambition)
My
theory is that
perhaps certain racist police officers view a Black man in a suit as someone with a certain level of power and connection. He might still be a “nikka” in their eyes. But he might know somebody. He might have a connection to some entity that would hold them more accountable for abuse. I feel that police officers may
fear ( not respect) a Black man in a suit a bit more. Because of the image and narrative it presents to potential jurors and society as a whole.
Of course as someone mentioned earlier, being the “brother in a nice suits” creates another set of problems based on jealousy from the potential race soldier.
But we need to stop pretending that things like suits and wedding bands don’t contribute to image. Which was the point Kevin Samuel’s was trying to express with his Birth of a Nation explanation. Image is influential and dangerous.
The Black male in America has a terrible image. Not one person in this thread can deny that fact.
My granddaddy was a police officer , so he taught us the things that his racist co-workers would use to profile us and how to avoid certain scenarios.
Really understanding how they think and why can potentially save your life.
Im open for correction and debate. Just address what I say, and not what you think I
wanted to say.
Im not scared of none of these nikkas. I watch them call great Black men “c00ns” on a daily basis.
