This was a very well put-together post and all, but people should learn to let go of the past. If you didn't personally experience an event yourself then I don't see how someone should let an entire ethnic group who has been oppressed many years ago define who they are today.It's not necessarily racist, though it's ignorant.
It's important to understand why being "black" is a thing. For a few hundred years being a certain color meant you were property. It mean people could beat you with impunity, you had no rights. It didn't matter what tribe our country you were from, all that mattered was that those in power declared you black. Then slavery was abolished, and still this group was singled out by those in power. Their rights were still restricted, laws were created on the basis of skin color, and it still didn't matter where you were from. Things have certainly gotten better, but racism is still a constant threat.
So when you look at why black pride is a thing, you need to account for the history behind what it means to be black. It wasn't a group that was formed out of desire, it was a grouping that was forced on a diverse group of people, which was then used to enslave and oppress them for centuries. The black pride movement was one born out of self defense, it was a necessity for survival. A group of people was treated like a monolith by the institutions of power, so they became a monolith to overcome those institutions.
So, given that context, it makes sense for black pride to be a thing. Try to examine white pride through the same historical context. It's a very different picture. There was no oppressive force to overcome. There was no forced grouping. White, in at least an American context, is a meaningless concept. White has never existed as a monolithic group, because white never had to band together to defend itself from those who sought to use whiteness as a tool of oppression. In fact, whites have fought amongst each other for centuries. My ancestry is Italian and Irish. When the Irish began to immigrate to the US, they were treated like garbage. The "native" whites ran newspaper headlines calling them sub-human. Yet now I'm supposed to believe "white" is some coherent group in which to be proud of? Why? That's silly. Are the Irish part of this group? What about the Germans? How about the Polish? What about Russians? What do I and someone in Moscow have in common that we should be proud of? Absolutely nothing.
So then where did white pride come from? Quite simply it came from white nationalists who desire a white ethno-state because they believe white to be superior. Its roots are plainly racist, and has zero meaning beyond that when even the slightest level of critical thinking is applied.
As you said, things have gotten better, but trying to use history from a few hundred years ago to defend "black pride" today is ridiculous.
Racism might still exist within certain individuals, but it is not on the extreme level as it was long ago, so why black pride exists and makes sense today in your head, is kinda weird.
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