if it is a white woman and a black man? that he is more likely to cheat on her, if not leave her all together, and has a higher chance of carrying aids if he is sleeping around, andsome consider roughing upwomen acceptable (not sure how acceptable compared to whites).When I lived in a poorsection of town anddid day labor, several blacks would talk about how theyhad roughed up their wives/girlfriends, for stuff such as spending too much money on "getting their hair did" and then either laugh about it, or talk it up as if the were some macho guy for beating a woman up. When I first heard this from one of them I asked an older respectableblack guy if he the other guy was serious, and he said yeah, and acted like it was fairly common, but personally looked down on it. I also remember when I was a kid before we moved out of the city, my mom had a black friend at work and she had kids around my age, we visited one day and she was all bruised up pretty bad and we had to leave. My mom explained to me that her husband was just raised in an environment where that was acceptable and that his dad did it, and she said that was the reason why he did it as well. Of course these cases areusually never reported. When thinking of domestic violence you are painted an image of some white guy in a trailer park.
Saying stuff like that would be considered harrasment though.If you even stare long enoughtheymight say they were victims of racism. If it is a white guy, black woman? the fact that his kids will look nothing like him and he will be carrying on no legacy. That should be enough.