Answer:
At the end of the story "Cheese Boys" in his autobiography, "Born a Crime," Trevor Noah describes an interaction with the police. Having just been in a car chase and now fearing arrest, Noah began to consider how tenuous his life was as a mixed-race person growing up in South Africa under apartheid and through the first few years after its fall. He realizes that, at best, he can try to work within the social and racial intricacies around him but is bound to fall into systemic injustice and discrimination. Conclusion: Noah has drawn a significant realization of the systemic problems that continue to exist across society and the need to recognize one's identity vis-à-vis such a system. He appreciates that in his own life, luck and privilege have a significant role, knowing that it was not just how he acted or decided in that very moment but instead elements far more significant than himself, such as the fact that he had eluded severe consequences in this incident. This encounter points back to the larger story of his memoir, one where the evolving challenge of racial identity, systemic oppression, and struggles for personal voice plays out in a complex socio-political landscape.