Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any man, large, small, light, dark, whatEVER would scare the crap out of me wearing a balaclava. But more than that, I would think you'd be terrified to be a black man running in one — cops will be after you in a heartbeat. It's illegal:
https://code.dccouncil.us/dc/council/code/sections/22-3312.03.html
Holy crap.
Anonymous wrote:Any man, large, small, light, dark, whatEVER would scare the crap out of me wearing a balaclava. But more than that, I would think you'd be terrified to be a black man running in one — cops will be after you in a heartbeat. It's illegal:
https://code.dccouncil.us/dc/council/code/sections/22-3312.03.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you dress on running gear? If anyone running up behind me looked like they were exercising, I'd be more relaxed but someone was wearing regular street clothes jogged up behind me, I'd panic a bit. I'm an assault survivor and I have no qualms about crossing the street or whatever if my fight or flight kicks in.
I'm a guy who runs so not your target audience, but that's my reaction too. For a quick look, if I see someone wearing a florescent yellow or orange shirt, I figure they are far less likely to be a threat, because that's not going to help sneak up on someone or escape from the police. I also tend to wear bright clothes like that just to be visible to cars, so it's a win-win.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it depends on the style. If you wear one that covers your face and leaves openings for just your eyes, yeah, that would set me on high alert (but not because you're black, I'd feel the same way about a white man wearing one). If you wear one with a complete open face, I wouldn't think twice about it.
+1
Honestly, almost every woman is on at least "medium alert" when running solo and they encounter an unidentified man. After time, you might be someone people recognize as "balaclava man" but if it's not a dude I regularly see on the trail during my runs, I will always be a little nervous and guarded. And if people can't see your face, they can't recognize you as the familiar guy they see running every Friday morning.
It genuinely has nothing to do with you being black - and everything to do with you being a man. Because the fact remains is that while 99% of men aren't going to attack a woman running, the person who does, will be male, and not female. So we're going to be cautious about strange dudes. And many of us have known someone who was assaulted.
Anonymous wrote:No one is going to admit that race makes a difference to them, OP.