This is part of the problem; most people use anecdotal evidence to support their preconceptions without actually investigating.
I will certainly grant that we perceive ourselves as having a problem with racism, what I deny is its reality. Take these latest two cases of white cops killing black men. They are widely perceived as being racially motivated, yet are there any statistics to back that up? Well, yes and no. There are statistics one can look at but they don’t back up the charge.
The Bureau of Justice Statistics keeps voluminous data on crimes, criminals, and the justice system, and they have data that is relevant here. One of their categories is called Arrest Related Deaths (ARD) where they analyze all deaths that occur when people are being arrested, pursued, or already in custody of law enforcement agencies.
From 2003 through 2009, a total of 4,813 deaths were reported to the Bureau of Justice Statistics’ (BJS) Arrest-Related Deaths (ARD) program. Of these, about 6 in 10 deaths (2,931) were classified as homicides.
bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/ard0309st.pdf
Now, if there really is racism in this country the statistics should show different percentages in the homicide of whites versus that of blacks. After all, if the narrative being spun about the killings of Michael Brown in Ferguson and Eric Garner in New York is true, the statistics should show it. What they actually show is that the homicide percentage of blacks is virtually identical to that of whites (Table 7).
One does have to be careful with statistics, however, not because what they show is untrue but because what they show is often not what one thinks they show.
Ender