So I got caught in the meta of the conversation in another subthread, but to comment on the main post here... this could use more precise wording but I also acknowledge there aren't many options when it comes to what language to use nowadays, especially when the other side is actively distorting definitions and deliberately changing language.
That said, I don't think it's genetic, and this isn't about black people necessarily. It is the main black culture, and it is the culture that has been born out of the struggle of slavery, so it isn't a stretch to suggest they have a unhappy disposition to their beliefs and rhetoric.
It's hard not to pitty them because it must be a huge burden to live like this, but we can clearly not all black people are like this, but of course these black people are not into their "blackness" and are also not widely accepted in black culture (i.e. Candace Owens). I'm not sure of what the solution would be here, because it seems it's an identity defined this way. It's defined in contrast to the "white oppressor", and without the oppressor that identity might cease to exist, so ironically they need it and therefore continue to look for excuses to feel hurt.
So I got caught in the meta of the conversation in another subthread, but to comment on the main post here... this could use more precise wording but I also acknowledge there aren't many options when it comes to what language to use nowadays, especially when the other side is actively distorting definitions and deliberately changing language.
That said, I don't think it's genetic, and this isn't about black people necessarily. It is the main black culture, and it is the culture that has been born out of the struggle of slavery, so it isn't a stretch to suggest they have a unhappy disposition to their beliefs and rhetoric.
It's hard not to pitty them because it must be a huge burden to live like this, but we can clearly not all black people are like this, but of course these black people are not into their "blackness" and are also not widely accepted in black culture (i.e. Candace Owens). I'm not sure of what the solution would be here, because it seems it's an identity defined this way. It's defined in contrast to the "white oppressor", and without the oppressor that identity might cease to exist, so ironically they need it and therefore continue to look for excuses to feel hurt.