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Fox News’ Will Cain will ask “How much race is he part of the problem in juvenile crime?”

Will Cain (host): First, follow up on a story that we brought to you yesterday, the increase in the violence of young people across America. We have brought you these breathtaking statistics showing juvenile offenders and crimes against other people who have reached the past five years. Now we use a lot of euphemisms in a pleasant conversation and in the media. These euphemisms often hide the truth. We refer to the city center when we talk about minorities, and juvenile crime is the problem, but the question is how much the breed is part of the problem in juvenile crime?

Well, the FBI does not break down juvenile offenders by race, but this is the case for adults. Over the past five years, overall, there have been more white offenders than black offenders in total crimes against people, but there are more whites than blacks in America. The only statistics that really count is per capita and these figures are much higher for black Americans. We could advance this and enter more serious crimes, such as homicides, which show more black offenders than white offenders, once again, it is according to FBI data. But it is also the total number. Again, this does not adapt to per capita, where black Americans represent around 11% of the population.

But the purpose of this conversation is not to slander a particular race. It is not a question of placing the evils and reproaches of the company on one group compared to another. But you can only solve a problem if you recognize a problem first. You cannot use paper euphemisms on something that is a truth.

So, if these are the figures for adults, aren’t they correlated the same among young delinquents? This is certainly what we seem to see in some of the videos coming out of Washington DC or Cincinnati. And why does the FBI not provide this data with regard to juveniles?

Let’s have the conversation now and bring the civil rights activist and founder of the Woodson Center, Bob Woodson. Bob, it’s great to have you in the series, I always appreciate the frank conversation. Bob, I don’t think we were doing anyone using euphemisms or dancing around the subjects. The question is whether or not we have a crime problem among black young people? When you see what happened in Cincinnati or Washington, DC, it seems to be anecdotal suggestion. And that suggests that there are also data to save them and we cannot resolve this unless we recognize it first and that we have the conversation.

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