I'm not sure that
@kg01 said that. Certainly not in the post you're quoting.
What he said was that as a black man, you have to be extra cautious about being out as a minority is society. There are simply too many cases where a white person somehow feels justified in ordering a black person to stop, detains them with firearms or makes a citizens arrest (call it whatever you like) when the action is an over-reaction and comes too close to vigilantism (is that a word?). I actually don't hear him saying the kid was jogging, or that the kid was an angel or any of those things. What I hear is that...the actions are NOT justified by the "crime" (assuming the kid even committed a crime).
Look, I get what some of ya'll are saying...the race-baiting in the media is bad for our country. BUT, I do think that all too often we seem to have folks in neighborhood watch situations where things escalate, when they should have been turned over to the police. George Zimmerman and Trayvon come to mind. Again, Trayvon was no saint. But...let the police sort these things out. (I don't mean to derail this whole thread into an argument about that, I am ONLY trying to say that there are some striking similarities that my black friends have pointed out to me as one of the underlying issues here....)
Bottom line remains that even if this kid was guilty, this was NOT the way to handle it, and (unfortunately) it looks like it took agitation and extraordinary efforts to get the wheels of justice rolling. That's enough right there to go talk to your son about......
By the way, if I were jogging or walking down Martin Luther King Blvd and two black dudes drove up on me in a pickup truck with guns drawn...I'd be scared sh**less and goodness knows what I'd do. But I really doubt that I'd just stop and start chatting with them...so the fact that the kid struggled and got into an altercation doesn't count for much with me.
I hate the race-baiting that occurs in media and I especially hate it when it appears that was the only way for these black folk to draw attention to an injustice. We can do better.