And I believe you seem extremely defensive and extremely willing to attribute opinions to me that are not actually mine.
Not so much your opinion but your attitude toward police is very negative, you make statements that police execute black people, that any black person's life is at substantial risk by being in the presence of a police officer. I don't think that is true, particularly in this case with Lyoya.
I fortunately, statistics are on my side.
Beginning in infancy, black children are regarded as being stronger, more impervious to pain, less vulnerable compared with their white peers. From toddlerhood/preschool onward, daycare and teachers are more likely to be punished and punished more harshly than their white peers for exactly the same behavior. This pattern only escalates as the children grow older, throughout their school years and beyond. They are regarded as less intelligent, which in schools these days means less compliant and any small offense is seen as a larger offense than with a white child.
As I’ve written many times before, I grew up in an entirely white school system after the first grade. I saw plenty of smart kids made to feel stupid by teachers with no appreciation for independence or anything other than immediate and silent compliance. I was lucky: my older sibling was an excellent student so I was assumed to be similarly endowed—I am very well aware how much the benefit of a doubt can work for or against you, especially a child in school. I saw too many kids treated unfairly and how that worked against them.
It is not difficult to see how treating some students as less intelligent and capable but as more mature and stronger and more impervious to pain can be very much a self-fulfilling prophesy. Numerous studies support this and have done for decades.
Of course this plays out after school in the community at large. Black kids, especially boys, are more likely to be seen as dangerous and criminal and violent simply because of the color of their skins. And it only escalates in adulthood.