A black professor of sociology at Vanderbilt University took to the opinion pages of the Tennessean to slam white people, saying the race as a whole is at fault for all the unrest in Baltimore.
Tony Brown wrote: White people act "routinely to harm, demean and damage black and brown people" and their actions "explain the lofty levels of frustration and despair among black and brown youth," the Daily Caller reported.
He then referred to the racist song sung by members of the University of Oklahoma and the white South Carolina police officer who faced murder charges for shooting a black man eight times, and blamed parents of frat members and "others like them" for raising racists and sending them to "racially homogenous" schools and living in white neighborhoods.
"The bottom line is that it's everyday whites making everyday choices that lock in and protect white privilege," he wrote, the Daily Caller reported.
He then advocated minorities use their cell phones and other recording devices to "record the discourteous way coworkers or service industry workers or police officers treat you. Record your friends talking about the indignities and micro-aggressions you as a person of color, for example, face in all- or mostly-white spaces. If you happen to identify as white, then record Uncle Roy talking at a private family gathering about the good old days when blacks knew their place. Record how pleasant your interactions are with police officers doing routine traffic stops."
He then suggested "all post our videos" for comparison purposes.