Yes, this affects non-white people as well. Our society and culture values whiteness above all else. This makes PoC feel inferior and ultimately concede that light skin is superior. Because our culture values it. It takes a tremendous about of effort for a person of color to break out of this thinking. It is done in such a way that it's highly likely that white people feel superior even on an subconscious level. No one said that the forces of white supremacy and racism affects only white people. But for the sake of the discussion is makes white people racist. Not all white people support Trump, but if you bothered to read the studies, white people of all political stripes have a pro- white bias. There are forces here that are racist that have nothing to do with the overt kind of racism of Trump. "Small" things like thinking black people feel less pain. That can matter when you apply to be a cop and think a black man can survive at 12 shots. Ultimately, white people made this culture to begin with. They get the most flack for it because it is their responsibility to kill it. But they won't, because they stand to value in some way from it. For years, the drug war was used to cast black people and Latinos and Asians as drug users and drug addicts. But once white people start to become drug addicts through painkiller use, suddenly it's a crisis and the drug war is called into question. Suddenly drug addiction is a sad thing with real victims. "We all make mistakes." But that didn't stop white people from casting people of color as drug addicts. "Those people are low lives." Because white people live in a goddamn bubble until it effects white people. Because white people and white society is racist in a society that mollycoddled their values as well themselves.
Wooooow, is that really a thing? Do you feel like elaborating on that, or is there an interview or video footage with a cop or a study you can link me to that goes into that more?