
The thing that has really struck me hasn't been the destruction or the fires or the theft, or the sight of violent hooded and masked people (some of them children!) throwing stones and bottles; it has been the innocent people who felt somehow obliged to apologise for it all - most of whom would have referred to themselves as 'black'.
I've always been very much opposed to the idea of referring to human beings as 'black' or 'white' because it seems to me to be not only racist, but ridiculous.
I have a black cat who is really and truly absolutely black - but I have never seen a person of that colour, and I don't expect that I ever will. Albinoism runs in my family - but whilst I have seen many things that are truly white, I have never seen a person of that colour, and I don't expect I will ever see one of those either.
The fact is that all people are - in that absolutely horrible American phrase - 'people of colour', because if they were not, they wouldn't be people at all. Indeed, the only real difference between all people anywhere is that whilst most of them have an internal moral lodestone, some of them do not.
At the moment, we are seeing people wreaking havoc in Britain who have no internal moral lodestone, no sense of community, and no sense of consequence.
It's important that we don't use the terms 'black' or 'white' to think of or to describe those people because those words are not only inaccurate and inadequate, they divide people in an arbitrary, and dangerously erroneous way.
I think we can all - people of colour as we all are - agree that the words 'dumb', 'immature', 'inconsiderate' and 'greedy' can at least begin to describe the people who wreck buildings and businesses and destroy other peoples lives, and use our social networks to undermine our society.
Emily - http://www.metlissbarfield.com