I grew up in a Black Suburb right outside of Detroit called Southfield. Dudes from the area know it well...They were probably out here trying to draft some of the talent, but I digress. Using black hospitals as an example is moot, because there is only one in the entire country and that's Howard Medical Center. The schools I attended had majority black faculty. Black administrators, Black principals, black teachers. Professional black people who not only served as teachers, but mentors. Secondary father figures to some, and primary to some without fathers in the home. We had a varied curriculum the highlighted black achievement, and it was emphasized that our teachers weren't preparing some bum ass motherfukkers. They were teaching competitors to white people. We were taught to stand tall, speak confidence and walk into the world with purpose. We did have a few white teachers but you better believe they never got out of line and had the utmost respect for faculty and students. My city had black plenty of black businesses. From retail, to engineering, to the food service industry. My neighborhood consisted of Doctors, lawyers, entrepreneurs, Judges, etc. You make a lot of assumptions about people based on where they live. People don't all of a sudden forget where they come from because they move to the suburbs...They just realize that's where they don't want to be.
You sure do pass a lot of judgement for someone probably wearing nikes while he steps on the neck of a black suburbanite. What kind of car do you drive? What brands of clothes do you have on your back? You pay taxes,right? Your money is heading into the pockets of the white man all the same.