@phoenixrising
The most dangerous cities in the US are as follows
Detroit 78 percent black
Baltimore 63 percent black
Memphis 66 percent black
Saint Louis 49 percent black
Oakland ca 52 percent black and hispanic
Birmingham Al 64 percent black
Atlanta 55 percent black
Cleavland 55 percent black
You were doing so well when you were only throwing out stats but then you decided to add your own opinion and you lost the plot.
These are just facts. Lets get one thing straight its not the color of someones skin but the rotten nature of their culture. Black culture is rotten to the core in areas where there are large populations. Glorifying beating women and misogyny and gang life and drugs and crime in general.
Remember the statistics you quoted stated only a percentage of black people commit the crimes you mentioned. Your comment about "the nature of their rotten culture" has just shifted away from a percentage to encompassing the whole community.
You have no doubt heard about Cosanostra, the Gambino Family and the likes aka "The Mafia" would you say that the Italian culture is rotten to the core due to the notoriety of the mafia.
Have you heard about Mara Salvatrucha, commonly known as MS-13, does that make the latino culture rotten to the core?
You have heard about the recent Opiod crisis that is impacting more white people than minorities in the US?
Here is a quote that might help you understand that this is not a lefty issue
In the context of public concern that White Americans are turning to heroin, policymakers are calling for reduced sentencing for nonviolent illicit drug offenses and the expansion of access to addiction treatment. At the same time, in Black and Latino communities, many drug-addicted individuals continue to be incarcerated rather than treated for their addiction. Yet racially stratified responses to heroin use are ultimately harmful to all Americans, including Whites. For instance, the US opioid crisis of the 1970s that was centered in communities of color led to harsher penalties and criminalization. If we had invested in harm reduction programs and increased the availability and quality of addiction treatment then, we would have been better positioned to reduce the toll of the current opioid crisis.