as shown by Leonard Pitts latest column,
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/living/columnists/leonard_pitts/15054373.htm Excerpt:
So I would have thought it uncontroversial to observe, as I recently did in this column, that her death and the indiscriminate slaughter of American children -- in Miami or anywhere else -- qualified as ''an American problem.'' Apparently, I was wrong. That is, at least, the feeling of dozens of folks who've written in correction and rebuke.
True enough, they say, Florida is an American state and Miami an American city, but Sherdavia was an African-American child. Her suspected killers were also black. Therefore, her murder was not an American problem. It was, rather, a black problem, and only a black problem, born of black dysfunctions for which black people, as Bill Cosby has recently said, bear the onus.
To call me appalled is to understate.
I suppose the first thing that needs saying is that these individuals are wrong on the facts. Like it or not, we live interconnected lives on a small planet. Take the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks as illustration: They grew out of grievances half a world away to which most Americans would have told you on Sept. 10 they had no connection. We now know better.This is a sad commentary where the idiots that wrote to Mr. Pitts not only feel that way, but feel obligated to say it out loud. We're in the 21st Century, and equality is still conditional--as long as some are more equal than others. It really does make you wonder who your friends really are. :(