The obvious answer is that it exposes fractures in the Democrat's ethnic coalition. You can't really show 90's style gang culture in a modern context without explaining why it is so different today.
the Mexican cartels have consolidated most of the drug supply routes. they either co-opt the black gangs, or force them out of business. The black-on-black crime now isn't really gang warfare anymore. It's mostly about disrespect spiraling into a cycle of fear ("I dissed him, so he's gonna want to kill me, so I better kill him first if I don't want to die.") Those sorts of fights would seem extremely stupid and shallow. It's much easier to convey gang warfare being about money and power.
any honest take on the situation would be very damaging to the democrat's identity politics coalition. if they don't continue getting 90% of the black vote, they are in trouble.
>The black family—a mother, three teenage children and a 10-year-old boy—moved into a little yellow home in Compton over Christmas vacation.
>When a friend came to visit, four men in a black SUV pulled up and called him a "nigger," saying black people were barred from the neighborhood, according to Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies. They jumped out, drew a gun on him and beat him with metal pipes.
>It was just the beginning of what detectives said was a campaign by a Latino street gang to force an African American family to leave.
>The attacks on the family are the latest in a series of violent incidents in which Latino gangs targeted blacks in parts of greater Los Angeles over the last decade.
>Compton, with a population of about 97,000, was predominantly black for many years. It is now 65% Latino and 33% black, according to the 2010 U.S. census. But it's not only historically black areas that have been targeted.
africanamerica org latinos ethinic cleansing
Attached: Franklindelanobluth.jpg (200x200, 8K)