You've acknowledged this in your first comment and now you're contradicting yourself.
Also black crime rates are the same as white crime rates. When averaging out the population of whites and blacks, black people are killed by cops 3x more than white people and incarcerated 4x more than white people for the same rate of crimes. If we break down the incarceration rate by states, the disparity is as high as 10x more likely to be arrested than whites.
I didn't acknowledge anything. Saying white's constantly call the cops doesn't mean there is a rise in a trend, it just means the behavior is constantly happening. Bending words and mental gymnastics. You claimed that the trend is rising, I acknowledged the trend exists. Two different things.
The black crime rate isn't supposed to be as high as the white crime rate and it is in fact higher, because one group is only 12% of the population with the other being over 50%. If you remove black men that are incarcerated, too old, or too little to commit serious crime, you've got a population below 5% committing the majority of crime in America.
Yes, we get arrested more. We have more police patrols because we have more violence. More violence invites more police which leads to people who are merely smoking weed getting arrested and sentenced in those communities much more than those in white communities. Black men are actually killed less than white males statistically due to population differences, with most encounters not resulting in death. Like I said before, blacks have a lower population but a higher rate of crime, of course we're going to be arrested and sentenced more.
I'm going out on a limb and I'm going to assume you're not black, so it's easy to assume our communities are like yours and that cops just like to come to our communities more because they're evil and racist. Our communities are extremely dangerous and we have a lot of criminals running around, believe it or not. An unreasonable and disproportionate ammount of black kids you meet can name an immediate relative that's been incarcerated. I've been locked up, my brother has, my father has, and so has my grandfather.
I've seen the crime first hand, and I know how far stretched it is. It afflicts Atlanta, cities in California, New York City, Florida. Everywhere where we are, it exists but acknowledging is apparently racist.