Prior to the mid-sixties, blacks owned businesses, banks, stores. They took pride in their neighborhoods, families. Taught their children respect. Their fathers taught their sons how to be men. Money stayed in the neighborhoods. Blacks lifted up blacks; and in a lot of cases, so did whites.
What has changed? I'd like to hear it from you, Cheri.
BTW... to give you an idea of the mentality of the rioter... they burned down the neighborhood Little Ceasars. I'm sure there are a number of families that counted on that store to feed them throughout the week. Smooth move, Exlax.
The mentality of rioters is the same as that of someone who punches a wall in rage - if they thought about it, they'd know they're just hurting themselves, but anger doesn't promote rational thought, and rage demands an outlet.
There's a lot of things that changed in the 70's, and they changed for everyone, but blacks got the worst of it. In a nutshell, the financially fortunate started finding ways to increase profit, and keeping more of it. When there was no serious pushback, they got bolder, and took more, demanding higher productivity from workers, reducing benefits, consolidating & merging to eliminate jobs, and outsourcing them all together, until we reached the point we are at now. Not enough middle class jobs to support the middle class, while the upper and lower classes keep getting bigger.
While they were doing that, middle class whites [who'd had decent paying jobs for decades] moved to suburbia, where black people were not welcome. [If they could find anyone to write a mortgage loan, which is doubtful]. Concentrated in the inner city, with lower wages & property values, their schools and homes deteriorated. Black owned businesses struggled to get loans, and went out of business.
Black people knew the FBI was trying to dig up 'dirt' on MLK and everyone associated with him, the KKK could run wild and no one would lift a finger to stop them [because there were law enforcement superiors under those hoods], and all the Civil Rights Acts did was drive the racism underground. Their schools didn't get good materials, or enough of them - how could they motivate their kids to work hard for a better life? They still wouldn't be able to buy a home in suburbia, or be promoted on merit, because white people didn't want them to succeed.
It's really tough to understand the feeling of "why bother"? that comes with being pushed and held down for so long it seems normal, but it's tougher to overcome it. That's why people give up looking for a job: humans can take just so much rejection before they opt out.
Black people saw whites getting decent jobs, buying homes in suburbia, sending their kids to college - all things they would never accomplish, because if they could do as well as white folks, then how could white folks justify the racism they cherished [secretly]?
Emancipation and integration forced whites to behave [in public] as if black people are their equals, but it didn't force them to change their minds. The only thing that could do that is seeing black people do as well as white people - but they'd have to start out equal, and it's white people who have the power to ensure they don't.