Black voters are outnumbered by whites and latinos. Even with that FACT, Black voters still voted in higher percentages than both whites and latinos.
Let me explain something to you since I think you have a disconnect between projections and expectations.
There's 100 people in the classroom. We're voting for class President. The options are Kamala and Trump. It's your choice on who you vote for or if you want to vote at all.
In the classroom, there are 54 white students. 22 latino students. 14 Black students. 6 Asian students. 4 other students.
When it came time to vote, 36 white students voted. 12 Latino students voted. 10 Black students voted. 3 Asian students voted. 1 other student voted.
That's a total of 62 votes. Trump won the class President race. The final results were Trump 38 votes. Kamala 24 votes. Trump won by 14 votes or to put it another way, Trump's margin of victory was the total number of Black students that were eligible to participate.
Of the 10 Black students that voted, 8 voted for Kamala. 2 voted for Trump.
So to put this in perspective, 14 out of the 100 students were Black, (and this includes Kamala who was running) and out of those 14 students, 10 of them voted. Out of the 10 that voted, 8 voted for Kamala (including herself) and 2 voted for Trump.
You're whole entire argument for a "Care Package" and why that would make a difference would only have impacted a total of 14 out of the 100 eligible voters. Also out of those 14, 8 of them voted for Kamala.
So once again I am asking you to explain why a "Care Package" is needed for each demographic and specifically Black people.
Take your time and digest the numbers that I laid out in this example because they closely reflect both the demographic makeup of our country and the voting blocks.