I'm a Black pastor alarmed by a new identity game some on the right are playing
The rights growing chorus of frustration with "Black people" is impossible to ignore. They call it "Black fatigue."They point to the race wars of the 2010s and the DEI takeover of Americas institutions as their breaking point. But after Donald Trump's return to the White House, something shifted.Instead of doubling down on the American creed of individualism, this faction swung hard into collectivism, painting Blacks as a singular problem with the same tired tribal brush they once scorned.Now, some on the right are leaning into posts like this one from Evan Kilgore on X, who wrote: "Why are black people so disproportionately violent? Why do they threaten or act with violence the second they are offended or inconvenienced? Seriouslywhy are so many black people like this?"Its a refrain echoed across countless tweets, each one a lazy slide into tribal identity politics that erases the individual and damns an entire race for the sins of a few.If you think a handful of ugly videos defines every Black person because of shared skin, youre not seeing straightyoure neck-deep in the tribal swamp you claim to hate.I know the violence in my community. Youd be hard-pressed to find anyone on the South Side of Chicago that isnt aware.CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINIONIts raw, its real, and I could sling blame at racism, "the White man," or liberal policies. I could just say, "Thats just Black people." But thats weakness.Tribalism is a crutch, a cheap shot that fuels keyboard wars on X but fixes nothing.The irony burns: a sizable faction on the right, after years of slamming tribalism, now guzzles its easy power. Theyve swapped principle for the rush of collective rage.Where will this lead them? What is their actual end goal?I chose the tougher road. My work is with kidseach one is a distinct soul, not a racial statistic. No two Blacks, no two anyone, are alike. Lifting them up means igniting their personal fire, not boxing them into a racial narrative. (Isnt that how we got into this mess in the first place?) Its hard, its messy, and not everyone makes it. But its the only path that matters. And works.I pour American culture into my youthits demand for individual grit, not "Black" politics or "Black" solutions. Theyre humans first, not pawns in a racial game. The way forward isnt through tribal traps, Right or Left, but through the discipline of forging their own futures.CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM PASTOR COREY BROOKS