No, idiot. You are the one who thinks in black and white. There is no one on this forum who has a more monochromatic "understanding" of the world than you. You argued that because Lou Reed was a a "punk" or whatever, that his political opinions couldn't be easily slotted into one category or another. All I was proving, as usual, is that you're wrong and that he was a pretty run-of-the-mill New York liberal.
It is so typically disingenuous of you to attempt to argue that "many" of his lyrics are "defensively anti-black" when he has one song on the New York album that references Jesse Jackson and Louis Farrakhan for antisemitic remarks they had made. This isn't an indictment of "black people," it's a criticism of The Nation of Islam.
Lou Reed spent his entire life in New York, a city filled to the brim with immigrants of every stripe. Your tunnel vision narcissism prevents you from understanding how anyone could possibly have an opinion on the matter that differs from your own, but I can assure you that Lou Reed was a strong proponent of multiculturalism.