I can see both sides of this argument, but I'm actually with Bucky on this one. I mean, OK, we (being white people) always look at it like "It's not our fault." And it was many, many years ago and I get that laws are different now and all that good stuff. BUT. Think about it from a different perspective. This didn't just happen yesterday, but that's kind of the problem for them. This wasn't one generation of people that had their entire course of life changed. There are huge gaps between races, financial, educational, and otherwise, that can almost exclusively be attributed to the poverty their families were forced into. And the argument I always hear is "they're not poor because of slavery, they're poor because of bad choices they made." Well, ya! What choices would YOU make if your family needed food? I mean, this has a lot of frustration behind it for them. Even after slavery ended, being black or any kind of minority meant no good jobs were open to you, if you were even lucky enough to find one. They didn't get pensions, they barely made anything as far as wages go, they couldn't save money. They couldn't send their kids to college even after their kids were allowed to go. So, great, we mixed everyone into public schooling. Whoopee. Now how many black students had to leave school early so they could work to help their family? Don't say they should have stayed in school. Sometimes, that's just not an option. Hungry bellies won't stop growling while they wait for you to finish school. So we have all these generations of black people who had next to no hope of ever getting out of a cycle of poverty, and then we throw out a few bones like Black History Month and expect everything to just be OK for them. Well, it's not. They were held back so long that it's going to take a LOT of help to make things truly "equal".