Originally posted by SHOCKvalue
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If the assumption is true that black people get pulled over more frequently than white people (wealthy black people get pulled over more frequently than wealthy white people, and poor black people get pulled over more frequently than poor white people), that would be an example of white privilege.
I'm interested in your employment statistics. Where did you get that from? It seems a little bit like cherry picking. Do black people also make up a disproportionately large portion of the highest tax bracket? According to the BLS statistics, black people have lower mean and median incomes in the United States than white people.
Edit: I just now realized what you did with your data. It's not even close to a logical application of the data. It tells me nothing about the wages of those individual people. Are black people receiving preference at the highest level jobs? At the lowest level jobs? At all levels? You can't just throw out a mean income and some other stat about demographics and prove your point. Hypothetically, if all of the black people were at low level positions, that would actually indicate a bias against black people.
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