No, I wrote inner city instead of black because I don't believe that race-based privilege exists in the United States.
Then you're profoundly mistaken. The only question is whether it's a lack of exposure or willful and rooted in something else. My hope is that it's the former, which is why I presented you with more than my opinion on the point. The fact is that if you're white you'll by and large be treated better by most people than your similarly situated black counterpart. And that's just the most benign expression of white privilege.
PBS had an interesting program on the subject a bit ago approaching the subject from another angle. It was on the heels of that Oklahoma fraternity were members were caught on video chanting "There will never be a n-word in SAE." They were looking at attitudes rooted in race across age groupings. The study looked at four age groupings: 17-34, 35-49, 50-64, and 65+.
Between 30 and 35% of whites believed that blacks are lazy. The high end was among the Baby Boomers. Between 18 and 24% believed black people are unintelligent. Between 24 to 36% believed blacks face little to no discrimination, which is funny when you consider most of them have evidenced disriminatory inclinations. I mean, who among them would hire someone they believed was inherently lazy and stupid? Between 8 to 20% declared they had never admired a black person, with the higher figure found among the younger respondents, surprisingly.
Now that means, on average, the average young black goes out into a world dominated by a race where nearly 4 in 10 presuppose he's lazy and two and ten think they're stupid. And the 50-64 crowd, disproportionately the money holders and deciders on futures, are in the high end of those unfavorable inclinations, along with being the most inclined to believe blacks don't face discrimination.
You know who doesn't have to overcome those suppositions? White people.
Then there's the ethnocentric principle. It essentially notes the tendency of people to find comfort and value in that which is most like themselves. Put that together, before you get to the other offerings I've given you by the links, and you begin to see the impossibility of holding your opinion when you have sufficient information about even the foundational truths and impact of race.