I don't even think it's that. I literally mean that he doesn't realize that he's wrong and he's being earnest. I saw a lot of these types in college. What people forget is that we're all still American and still subject to the same programming and lack of education. Race is not taught properly in America despite the fact that we're hanging out with people of different backgrounds. A guy like Travis Scott is from a place where 40% of the households have a median income of over 100,000 and his mother worked for apple and his father owned his old company (if I remember right). You take a kid like that, give him a typical American education and divorce him from the struggles of black america and he ends up looking at African-Americans the way most Americans do--largely responsible for their own problems. They see it as a mentality and that dressing a certain way is an expression of that mentality.
But the thing is, if you notice..he still says "we" are our own problem. The interconnected fate of Black Americans (that has always existed regardless of socioeconomic status) still remains within him. Most people like him are not bad guys, they just don't know any better and it's better to educate someone like him instead of yelling at him. People don't respond well to be yelled at in most cases, and being separated as a minority is senseless.
@Boesky this is what I meant by ignorant, I should have said uninformed.