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Racial Prejudice Quotes

Quotes tagged as "racial-prejudice" Showing 1-30 of 98
Merlin Franco
“When a white man goes to the pub, he is a socializer; a Brown man in a bar is a drunkard. A white arrogant man is an alpha male; headstrong Indians are pricks. A white man sleeping around is a lover; an Indian on multiple dates is a womanizer. White men make love, we Brown Indians f*ck”
Merlin Franco, Saint Richard Parker

Bryan Stevenson
“Of course innocent mistakes occur, but the accumulated insults and indignations caused by racial presumptions are destructive in ways that are hard to measure. Constantly being suspected, accused, watched, doubted, distrusted, presumed guilty, and even feared is a burden borne by people of color that can't be understood or confronted without a deeper conversation about our history of racial injustice.”
Bryan Stevenson, Just Mercy

Mark M. Bello
“A racist cop pulls over a black driver for little reason other than the fact that the driver is black and a recent robbery was committed by a couple of young black guys in a white community. The cop quickly realizes the driver is not one of the robbery suspects. He sees a man with a wife and two small children. They are not a couple of young punks. Still,he persists. Why?
“He asks to see the driver’s license and registration. While locating the appropriate documents, the black driver respectfully volunteers that he is legally carrying a handgun. The cop panics—is it the image of a black man with a gun? He barks out conflicting orders and then shoots the man
to death, in front of his family. Why? “Is it because the cop is an insensitive racist? Maybe he wasn’t trained or taught any better? Perhaps he lived a completely different life in a completely different world than that of the black man. In this cop’s world, were all black men potential criminals, people to be watched, people to be feared?”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Mark M. Bello
“Mr. Bialy said you were a good guy.”
“You don’t want a good guy representing you in situations like this one. You want a barracuda when it comes to dealing with bad cops, negligent police departments, and attorneys who represent them. They are afraid of me; they think I’m a bad guy. Please don’t give away my secret.” Sarah chuckles through her tears. He has an easy way about him. I hope he’s an ass-kicker in court.
“Your secret is safe with me, Zack.”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

“Through love, tribes have been intermixing colors to reveal a new rainbow world. And as more time passes, this racial and cultural blending will make it harder for humans to side with one race, nation or religion over another.”
Suzy Kassem, Rise Up and Salute the Sun: The Writings of Suzy Kassem

Jennifer Erin Valent
“Daddy didn’t say anything for a minute or so, and then he reached up and caught a firefly as it glowed beside him. “See this light?” he asked me when the firefly lit up his hand.


“Yes’r.”


“That light is bright enough to light up a little speck of the night sky so a man can see it a ways away. That’s what God expects us to do. We’re to be lights in the dark, cold days that are this world. Like fireflies in December.”


“Time meandered on without Gemma’s momma and daddy, and it meandered on without Cy fuller and Walt Blevins. . . but those of us left behind viewed life more dearly, felt it more keenly. I’d learned a bit more about God and I’d seen His powerful hands at work. As I was growing, my heart was changing. And the way I figured it, there were lessons learned in those dark days that would help me for years to come.”


“As I sat on the porch on that December day . . . I leaned my head against the rail and sighed deeply. The way I figured it just then, my summer may have been full of bad luck, but my life wasn’t. I figured as far as family went, I was one of the luckiest girls alive.”
Jennifer Erin Valent, Fireflies in December

Mark M. Bello
“It is not fun to be pulled over by a police officer. We’re upset or anxious when we’re pulled over by the police. We often know what we did wrong and await the penalty, or we wonder what we did wrong and await the explanation. But, do we expect to be manhandled or abused by the officer? Do we fear that he might kill us? For black people, especially black men, those fears are too frequently an unfortunate reality.”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Mark M. Bello
“The bottom line is the driver was twenty to twenty-five years older than the robbery suspect. Both husband and wife were college- educated, middle-class American citizens, like you and me.”
“Except that they were black, and we are not,” Jennifer states the obvious.”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Mark M. Bello
“How do people stand for this? How many people have to die before we rise up and say ‘enough is enough?”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Mark M. Bello
“Would cops really ignore her cry for help because of the lawsuit?”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Mark M. Bello
“It’s up to us, all citizens, regardless of background, to step up to the
plate and address these issues. We need to share our life experiences and offer honest appraisals of the problems we face. We need to do it at kitchen tables all over the nation. In schools, we need to educate our children to celebrate diversity rather than fight or kill over it. We need to promote our core values at home and abroad. That begins with citizens and police officers respecting each other and treating each other as each of us would want to be treated.”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Mark M. Bello
“This smells like a case of driving while black through a
predominately white community.”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Mark M. Bello
“Where is outrage from the National Rifle Association? Where’s the damned NRA? The NRA claims to believe the Second Amendment of the Constitution of the United States grants all of our citizens the right to survive and protect their families with any gun they want. I guess that’s only true when those citizens are Caucasian! Does the Second Amendment apply if you’re a black man driving through a white neighborhood?”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Mark M. Bello
“A racist cop pulls over a black driver for little reason other than the fact that the driver is black and a recent robbery was committed by a couple of young black guys in a white community. The cop quickly realizes the driver is not one of the robbery suspects. He sees a man with a wife and two small children. They are not a couple of young punks. Still,he persists. Why?
“He asks to see the driver’s license and registration. While locating the appropriate documents, the black driver respectfully volunteers that he is legally carrying a handgun. The cop panics—is it the image of a black man with a gun? He barks out conflicting orders and then shoots the man to death, in front of his family. Why? “Is it because the cop is an insensitive racist? Maybe he wasn’t trained or taught any better? Perhaps he lived a completely different life in a completely different world than that of the black man. In this cop’s world, were all black men potential criminals, people to be watched, people to be feared?”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

“Antiblack violencein Chicago was common since at least the 189-s, when blacks were brought in as strikebreakers. The violence grew with the black population. In the two years leading up to mid-July 1919, whhites bombed more than twenty-five homes and properties owned by blacks in white areas...One bombing killed a little girl...The police never arrested anyone, infuriating blacks.”
Cameron McWhirter

Mark M. Bello
“People who don’t know our city or our officers might conclude these people were targeted BECAUSE they were black.”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Mark M. Bello
“The fact is that this happens in a white community, with a black man, a gun, and a cop who claims he can’t see the black man’s hands. That combination is a recipe for disaster. It doesn’t matter who tells who what to do.”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Mark M. Bello
“When a little black kid disappears and the media ignores it, so does the public. I know you know this. Not only that but how much media coverage a case gets has a direct relationship to how much manpower the brass assigns to solving that case. It also impacts whether or not the feds get involved. I know you know this too, dammit . . .”
“. . . Lobby her on the other case at the same time, knock yourself out, but grant her an interview on Gilbert. Is that understood?”
“Loud and clear, boss. After all, we can’t let a little thing like institutional racism get in our way, now, can we?”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Mark M. Bello
“So, regardless of the outcome, Bialy will be pissing off some segment of his voters. If a grand jury fails to indict or indicts Jones and Bialy fails to secure his conviction; civil rights protests are likely in an already divided Wayne County. If Bialy secures a conviction, he becomes anti-cop or anti-law and order. It’s a classic lose-lose situation.”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Mark M. Bello
“We aren’t asking for any more rights than anyone else in this country. We’re not trying to take anything or anyone’s rights away. We’re not looking for a handout unless it is a handout in friendship.”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Mark M. Bello
“Can you imagine sitting in the passenger seat and back seat of a car and watching a cop shoot and kill your husband and father?”
Mark M. Bello, Betrayal In Black

Abhijit Naskar
“The problem is not that you see color, the problem is that you assume character from color.”
Abhijit Naskar, Karadeniz Chronicle: The Novel

Gail Collins
“The Northern women who worked for abolition were generally not free of racial prejudice - many female abolition societies refused to allow black members.”
Gail Collins, America's Women: 400 Years of Dolls, Drudges, Helpmates, and Heroines

“It was all in your head, they say. But where else is love if not in your head? And as Sal used to say, why is that fucking is always our story, but love is always theirs?”
sara collins

“Racism has became the mastermind of passing from one generation to another, as if natural law and ruling authority.”
Craig Majors, THE PROUD NEGROES OR NIGGAS NO DIFFERENCE: POEMS ARE WRITTEN BY

“There is no sure thing of racism allowing majority of black people to equally advance economically and politically. Why continue to settle?”
Craig Majors, THE PROUD NEGROES OR NIGGAS NO DIFFERENCE: POEMS ARE WRITTEN BY

“When the identity of a black person is rapidly changed, threatened,
or questioned by racism and oppression, signs of abnormality are present.”
Craig Majors, THE PROUD NEGROES OR NIGGAS NO DIFFERENCE: POEMS ARE WRITTEN BY

Abhijit Naskar
“Twinkle twinkle little star,
I know exactly what you are.
Nursery rhyme for humankind,
Descending all from Africa.”
Abhijit Naskar, Bulletproof Backbone: Injustice Not Allowed on My Watch

Manning Marable
“Most NYPD officers generally treated Malcolm X's murder case not as a significant political assassination, but as a neighborhood shooting in the dark ghetto, a casualty from two rival black gangs feuding against each other.”
Manning Marable, Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention

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