Question Author
"Lets just look at the maths. There are 1.2 million black people in London. In a bad year, 50 of them will kill someone. That's less than 0.004% of the black population. Therefore anyone that thinks blackness is a sufficient common denominator for violent crime clearly doesn't understand what a common denominator is. Just to contrast, in a bad year in Glasgow - Say 2005 - There were 40 murders. There were only 600,000 people in Glasgow. So that year, a Glaswegian - as a whole - was twice as likely to be killed as a black Londoner. Whereas the commonalities, when you actually look at the demography of violent crime, the commonalities remain the same in Glasgow, Liverpool, Belfast, Naples or London. Racial explanations are sort of a way out for powers that be; a way out for the wider society. And it's revealing that what happens in London is 'black-on-black' crime - even when the person committing is like me, has one white parent and one black parent. When it happens in Glasgow race is not important. "