It's statistically unlikely. Historically, lynchings were acts of extrajudicial mob justice, usually targeting individuals accused of rape, murder, and insurrection. It was MeToo and CancelCulture for a less civilized time; so long as you don't rape anyone, or come within eyesight of a woman who has a vested interest in lying about being raped (not that that ever happens! Believe All Women!) then Lynch Culture Mobs will have no reason to come after you. You cannot suffer Consequences if you comply with the social order and refrain from doing things that the mob asserts warrant Consequences.
Furthermore, both the frequency, and racial coding of, lynchings have been grossly distorted by modern myth. According to the Tuskegee Institute, only 4,743 people were lynched between 1882 and 1968. Incidents of lynchings during that period were skewed quite heavily towards the 19th century, with
rates of lynchings plummeting after 1923. Furthermore, the Tuskegee Institute found that more than a quarter of the victims of lynchings (1,297 people) were white. Even during the worst years (1884, 1892), lynching was a rare occurrence; since the Democrats changed their strategy from hating blacks to hating whites, it's basically unheard of - the most recent case of lynching was a single isolated incident that took place in 1981. You are far more likely to be falsely accused of encouraging lynching (usually for political reasons) than you are to be an actual victim of lynching.