I edited my comment to clarify that the white supremacist society is the status quo in the United States. It also exists in some other countries. Certain countries have other supremacy issues; I've heard that in China, Han supremacy is a huge problem, but I can't speak to that as I haven't been there.
If you live in the US, and you don't see white supremacy, I encourage you to pay attention to what non-white people have to say about their experiences.
> If you live in the US, and you don't see white supremacy, I encourage you to pay attention to what non-white people have to say about their experiences.
That's like saying: "Q is everywhere and if you don't think so, I encourage you to listen to some Q supporters."
I encourage you to maybe focus on your worldview that monomaniacally reduces the entire world to an arena of skin color - never qualifying things, unable to contextualize.
Frankly, anti-racism is fundamentalism.
We traditionally called people that think in those terms: racists.
If you live in the US, and you don't see white supremacy, I encourage you to pay attention to what non-white people have to say about their experiences.