Mm, Other M is a perfect example of how to take something good and destroy it intentionally.
Elder Scrolls is guilty of the same old BS that the entire fantasy genre has been spouting since Tolkien, which is using fantasy races as a way to talk about race without actually including any people of color in your story (this is coming from someone who has read a ton of books and like 90% of them were sci-fi or fantasy). Granted I believe TES does have some PoC but its no significant number, like I'd probably say something like <1% of the characters in the two that I've played.
I dunno, Morrowind's definitely full of black people who occasionally are displeased at foreigners tampering with their culture and age-old traditions.
Um. And, also y'know. Redguards are all dark-skinned humans (and Hammerfell is around the same size as Skyrim). You've clearly never played or heard of the earlier TES games. Arena had all of the provinces, including Hammerfell. Daggerfall was set in High Rock and Hammerfell.
Redguard had a Redguard main character and took place in Hammerfell. If you've only played Oblivion and Skyrim, sure, you mostly see Imperials and Nords respectively, because of where they're set. Just like you don't see many Bretons in Redguard or Bosmer in Morrowind.
This could be used as a anecdote to how schools are draconian in their protection of school premises... but as for a case of race. Frankly unless there is another part of the story where they actually tackled him to the ground and beat him with night sticks... I don't see it.
I don't consider race to be the main issue, but I don't think it helped. The main issue is that they still wanted to charge him even after it became clear that it wasn't a bomb. It was just as wrong when the same thing was done in 2007 to Peter Berdovsky (who is white).
This? This is
exactly what I was getting at. It's not an issue of race, it's an issue of the school policy/teacher being terrible and the cops on the scene being obtuse assholes. That said, I do think there's a point where he should have stopped being incredulous (it's a
clock) and actually explained that it was a project he had worked on and brought in to show his teacher. Assuming that part of the story is accurate, anyways, and it wasn't just "It's a clock-"*handcuffs*.
At least it wasn't school security, they're even worse. I remember in my high school seeing one of our rent-a-cops taze and tackle a special-needs student because he refused to stop and hand over his backpack.