Many years ago I had a To Hell With It attitude about the appearance of my rides. How'd that work out for me? I got pulled over a lot because my window tint was too dark, my wheels were too wide, my bumpers & headlights were too low, my headlights were covered, my headers were too loud etc. Or often, for no reason at all except the cop was pissed I could afford that car and he couldn't!
In California I was pulled over for a "safety check" of a totally stock Royal Enfield motorcycle. The officer could find no issue so he let me go. About a quarter mile further along the same road another officer pulled me over for a "safety check." He told me he'd been warned on the radio that an unsafe motorcycle rider was in the vicinity. So since I was the only motorcycle rider on the road of course that had to be me! At the time I was an officer in the USMC, was wearing a helmet, and had a base safety inspection sticker on my bike. None of that mattered! They didn't want any "Hells Angel" motorcycle rider in their town even if his hair was 1/8th inch long and he was an officer in the USMC!
Not long after that I bought a brand new '69 Red Roadrunner 440 6Pack. I was pulled over almost every time I drove that car. And that wasn't limited to the state or municipality I was driving in. That car was so red, so in your face, it was considered illegal to operate even while parked.
Once while driving my Road Runner through a local small town I was pulled over, with no probable cause, nor could the officer find anything wrong with my title, equipment, etc. But the chief of the local police was called to the scene. When he arrived he told me. "We don't want your kind in our town!! If you are stupid enough to drive that hot rod back here, you will get a ticket every time we spot your hot rod darkening our borders." My ticket that night? Creating a public threat!! Which cost me $35, a lot of money in 1969!
Getting older I noticed people whose rides weren't so in your face got a lot less tickets and had lower insurance rates than I. So I went under cover, if you will. I didn't change my driving habits. I just changed my public persona. In fact the only red car I've owned for many years is a Honda Fit.
Now I drive cars that appear totally stock. I'm almost never stopped. I'm not pulled over to check my registration or what state I actually live in. I'm almost totally under the police radar. As long as I appear to make an effort to drive within the law, I'm assumed to be OK.
For example I got pulled over in a construction zone a couple of years ago while driving through Virginia in my Honda Fit. I was driving 55 in a 35 construction zone on a 2 lane highway and I had an out of state license plate. The officer asked why I was driving so fast & I explained I was looking for a place to stop for breakfast and didn't notice the construction signs. He of course let me go & even advised me where a good place was for breakfast.
What am I saying? Don't get yourself profiled. Don't be the only black on a white street, the only white on a black street. Or the ride with the darkest window tint. And for God's sake don't drive even a mile over the posted speed in a car that appears to be speeding when it is parked!
Is profiling by police unconstitutional? Of Course it is! Is it a fact of life? Of Course it is!