>>99201137The fuck you on about? Static's best friend is white as hell and so are two of his three biggest enemies. Static is black, but he rarely expresses it as an inward struggle. He tends to blame his environment more than his upbringing, which separates him from his rivals and his enemies who often appear to lean on the nature<nurture side. Yeah, Static looks up to black superheroes, but that is because there aren't many of them, yet he still has white friend and looks up to white super heroes, which in this modern society would automatically get him labeled as a "race traitor" by his peers. Static touches on racial issues, but never relies on them to move a story, and that works well for him because, again, most of his enemies play the victim card.
Basically, Static is just Static, and making him white or black makes little difference, seeing as he would still be fighting crime in the city, which would still include a ghetto where, coincidentally enough, many of his enemies lie in wait and blame society, where as Static looks to better it, not for blacks, but for everyone.