I have mixed feelings about the reassurances expressed so far. In my view, it's perfectly legit to say that there's a sub-culture of poor, black people in this country that has some pretty nasty traits - entitlement, bitterness, violence, etc. - and it's equally legit to condemn those traits and feel anger towards the people exhibiting them.
However, I think you're right to be concerned about issues like this:
LadyKate wrote:
If it were a couple of white girls, would I have been as angry?
I'm guessing you wouldn't be, because human beings are hard-wired to see patterns and react based on those patterns. When you see white people acting like those girls you described, you probably see them as individual assholes, because they don't fit any pattern that's been established in your brain. When you see black people acting that way, though, you (correctly) note that their behavior is a typical example of a broader sub-culture you dislike. As a result, however, your reaction to the
particular black people acting that way is altered, and probably intensified, by that pattern-recognition, and you end up judging them for the sins of all black people rather than just their own behavior.
Also, there's inevitably an element of confirmation bias that comes into play. You've identified this pattern, and now whenever you see examples of it, the pattern is more deeply ingrained in your mind. But, the reverse isn't true - when you see examples that contradict the pattern, you subconsciously reject or recategorize those contrary examples in order to keep the pattern intact. Again, it seems humans are just hard-wired to do this.
That's why I don't think this is an innocuous reaction:
Screeling wrote:
I drive down the road and get behind somebody with a Sonora, Mexico license plate going 10 mph under the speed limit. I shoot around them uttering "frickin Mexicans" under my breath. Yet I dated a girl from Mexico for two years and liked her family more than my own.
When we get irritated by people, we assign all kinds of nasty slurs to them. I think its a reaction to show myself as different from that person so I subconsciously seize on the most apparent aspect of them and turn it into something bad.
Obviously, Screeling doesn't hate Mexicans, and it's true that we tend to aim for the easy targets when we get irritated with someone, but I think there's more going on in our subconscious than just that. Again, I think it's a reaction that's intensified by pattern-recognition and confirmation bias. Also, this is a classic example of "othering" - i.e. identifying some trait that distinguishes someone from ourselves and using that trait as the basis of an "us and them" categorization. If Screeling were Mexican, he wouldn't think "frickin Mexicans" and if you were fat, you wouldn't think "that fat b*tch", because doing so would be including yourselves in the condemnation. Instead, you find some distinction to put the person in a different category of human being than you, and then it's "safe" to condemn them without implicating yourself.
*Edit: Incidentally, I want to point out that I'm guilty of doing all these things myself, so I don't want to give the impression that I'm being all holier-than-thou.