Jamal Joseph Johnson Jr., 18, is suing his parents for the sum of $500,000 over racial injustice and the unequal opportunities he will face for “being born black and underprivileged in America” his lawyer said in court.

Johnson’s lawyer pleaded that her client faced widespread discrimination in all fields of life based on the color of his skin and will suffer the lifelong consequences of his parents’ “egotistical and selfish choice of giving birth to a black child in an oppressive and racially segregated society such as modern America.”

“My client did not ask to have fifteen times more chances of being incarcerated or of being shot by police, of having access to less educational opportunities, lesser wealth and to statistically face more drug addiction problems than most white males,” he told the judge.

Lawyer Precious J. Williams, who is representing the teenager, believes that her client’s demands are reasonable and that they are a just counterbalance for all the lifelong inequalities he will face for being born a black male in an “oppressive and racially segregated society such as modern America.”

“Trayvon Martin was shot for buying skittles in a white neighborhood. What are my client’s chances of making it alive in the long run?” Johnson’s lawyer asked the judge visibly emotional.

The case which has attracted national attention could set a landmark ruling believes legal expert and former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, Ari Goldstein.

“A ruling in favor of this young man could open the door to every child in America to sue his or her parents if they believe they were brought into this world with crippling or unequal opportunities to succeed in life,” he explained when reached by phone.

In 2013, a 35-year-old morbidly obese man sued his parents for $300,000 and won after proving that his education and family upbringing were responsible for his various medical ailments.