I'll add that I have a problem with people throwing around racism claims so casually. In addition to it being unfair to people who are unfairly accused of being racists, I have a problem with this because it also devalues the meaning of the word "racist".
I mean, being called a racist SHOULD be one of the worst things you can accuse a person of. I mean, look at that Michael Richards rant from years back, where he's throwing around the n-bomb. Who looked worse there, Michael Richards, or the guy who Michael Richards was calling a *bleep*? Obviously Michael Richards came out looking worse, because he was acting like a racist f***.
But this notion that all white people are racists means that being racist isn't something that's worth pointing out. I mean, if people are INHERENTLY racist just for being white, then they can't help being racist. Why would I bother criticizing and shaming them for it if they can't help being racist any more than I can help being black? More importantly, why should they feel ashamed about it when they know that they're gonna be thought of as racists regardless of what they do? So I go around constantly telling white people that they're racists for being white, to the point where pointing out REAL racism ceases to have any significance since "pfft, they were just gonna say I was racist anyway."
Accusations of racism SHOULD mean something. That SHOULD be a serious f***ing accusation, but it's going to increasingly mean less the more that we start throwing it around all the time. I mean...if white people are AUTOMATICALLY racists, then accusing a white person of ACTUALLY doing something racist doesn't really mean much. That word should be reserved for special cases, otherwise it loses its power.
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