(Credit: AP/Evan Vucci) At the end of 2017, a Worcester, Massachusetts, rapper dropped “I’m Not Racist.” The Joyner Lucas song was about a black man sitting down with a supporter of President Donald Trump, in an effort to exchange ideas, share perspectives and enhance social relations. It instantly went viral. Many loved the video, calling it genius — and giving a sense that the rapper took a creative approach to start a much-needed conversation on our race problem in America. I wasn’t feeling it for a number of reasons. I wasn’t interested in listing to a white person address me as “N*gger.” Nor was I much interested in the black perspective the video offered.