You are offended by the notion of our nation rising up together as one people. This response of yours appears to define yourself by an apparent hatred. By a need for vengeance. I am not surprised that someone would reject the idea of coming together to heal.
I have no hatred, but the forgiveness will happen when POC aren't prosecuted more strictly than their white counterparts, or when we don't have to teach our kids how to de-escalate a police encounter in order to save their lives. There's a number of issues that need to be talked about, forgiveness is earned, and the institutions of this country have a long way to go before we decide to drop the conversation and move on. It's not vengeance or some other bullshit excuse you can spout off from your pulpit about coming together, it's actual justice, the thing that a lot of people on this board talk about all the time. We don't want thoughts and prayers, we want actual progress towards the exact same goal you're talking about, there are just steps in between that some people seem either too dense or too delusional to want to accept.
There is going to be friction, that is the nature of conflict, but to ask people to ignore the reality that is their daily experience in order to reach unity without any resolution to the problems they face is offensive. It implies that their daily experience is irrelevant to the bigger picture, or worst, that their experience is a figment of their imagination. I suggest you listen to some POC on what a day in their shoes is like, ask them how many times they experience a race related incident, the number is a lot higher than most people would guess. In some parts of the country it's terrifying how high the numbers can get. What most of us want is for our fellow American's to simply admit that yes, there is a problem, and start asking what can we do to find solutions to make our daily experiences the same.