Dinesh D’Souza addresses the whole Obama ‘can’t catch a cab because I’m Black’ thing:
I interviewed a number of cabdrivers for that book, and here is what they told me. Driving a cab is one of the most dangerous jobs in the country, because drivers are routinely picking up people they don’t know. The law requires cabdrivers not to discriminate, and yet it seems that cabbies of all backgrounds are willing to circumvent the law when they believe there is a risk to their security. Cabdrivers know that the average black male is not a criminal, but given what they perceive to be the increased likelihood of being mugged or held up by a member of this group, they don’t want to take a chance. My conclusion is that this kind of discrimination is hard to eradicate because it’s not based on mere prejudice; it is also based on behavioral differences between groups.
Does Barack Obama–who likes to be considered Mr. Straight Talk–have the guts to address this issue? I highly doubt it. Here’s what I’d like to hear him say: of course the law-abiding black male who can’t get a cab has a right to be angry, just as the law-abiding Muslim has a right to object to being considered by airport security to be a possible terrorist. (As a brown-skinned native of India, I too am sometimes mistaken for a Middle Eastern Muslim and given the full-body search.) But the legitimate anger that we minorities feel is best directed not at cabdrivers and airline security personnel, who are only trying to exercise caution, but rather at criminals and terrorists who give African Americans and Muslims a bad name. (source)
Thank you Mr. D’Souza!





I’ll consider this when all men face this type of “fear of crime” behavior because most criminals are men.