People define "Pro-Black" in so many different ways that it would be hard to calculate a number
I think most black people are "pro" things that affect our community. Most black people would want better educational opportunities for our disadvantaged, would want police and criminal justice reform, would want healthcare numbers to be reflected equally across the board for all races, and would like career and occupational opportunities (especially in the boardrooms) for black people.
A lot of people also don't want people who don't think exactly like them, to be considered "Pro-Black". Can a black person who grew up in the midwest and has strong "Christian" values that make them vote republican on certain issues, also be "Pro-Black"? I think so, but other people would say "ALL Republicans are
" (note I'm not a republican
but I'm also not an absolutist).
Most people are hive thinkers and feel that "If you don't exactly fit MY mold of thinking, then we can't associate" and that's dangerous. Being Pro-Black - to me - is rooted in my identity and pride of what I am, the issues that I stand for that specifically have to do with my race, and my willingness to help or find kinship in people who are also black and who are also not trying to hurt me in any way. All the other nonsense (gender identity, sexuality, sexual preference, where you shop, where you stand politically or religiously) doesn't matter to me