and again, the way nba players deal with a white boy being called a 'white boy' on camera sets no fckin example and is in no way applicable to the situation blacks in america face. you say you're not doing something but you're actually doing something
Ok, I don't know where my answer to this went.
My point was the guy who said whatever to Luka took responsibility for it, talked to the man himself, and they moved on from it. There's nowhere to hide on a basketball court, nobody played victim and a mole hill didn't become a mountain. People who play basketball at a young age learn these things and often become better people for it, that's the role basketball can play. So I hate to see the game turned into something divisive.
As far as the "situation blacks in America face" you're going to have to be more specific. Which black people? Did the civil rights movement not happen? Did we not elect a black president? Aren't you a doctor who I believe served in the military? Why can't people take responsibility for their own actions and their own family, not confront police and act like it's everyone else's fault?