Essay On Racial Stereotypes

649 Words2 Pages

African-Americans were taught at an early age that individuality, originality, and distinctiveness were all qualities that they would acquire, however, those qualities would never be of much value. They would all be grouped together based on their appearances, despite their differences in character. Our educators, the media, and the men and women sworn to protect us, inculcate these ideas. As a black person, I can tell you from experience that the black reality is hard to endure. Barely being old enough to speak, but still encountering racism. As a child, I could not fathom the idea that someone could dislike me solely based on the color of my skin. I, as well as many others, desired for someone to look past our outer appearance and become more focused on our character. We wanted them to realize that we have the potential to effect change despite the stereotypes and hardships placed on the black race. My goal in this paper is to bring awareness to the racial epidemic and offer possible solutions.
“Stereotype,” to believe unfairly that all people or things with a particular characteristic are the same (“Stereotype”). Throughout history, black people have been profusely stereotyped. The media constantly encourages these outrageous inaccurate assumptions about black people. Far too often in the media, Black people are criminalized, demonized
Many think that racial profiling is a new issue, but it is not. Racial profiling was prominent all throughout slave times, civil rights movement, and even today. Black people are stopped and frisked just because they are black. They are falsely convicted and framed for crimes they did not commit. Police are killing black people at a rapid rate. In 2015, police killed 102 unarmed black

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