REASON 1:
If you ascribe to the simplest and broadest definition of racism, which means "discrimination on the basis of race," THERE IS NO WAY FOR IT TO GO IN "REVERSE." Racism doesn't mean "hating on minorities"--it means "hating on ANYONE because of their race." Thus, "reverse racism" is a ridiculous concept/idea because any instance of racial discrimination would just be racism.
REASON 2:
If you ascribe to the definition of racism as institutionalized discrimination/oppression, "reverse racism" (which again, is a term that does NOT MAKE SENSE ANYWAY, AHHHH) doesn't exist. Discriminatory actions can be perpetrated by anyone, but racism needs the institutional backing. Racism is not a one-off moment of discrimination; it is a cycle, a web of power and structures that affirm one group's dominance over another. Racism has deep roots and a wide reach.
At the end of the day, a discriminatory action can stay encased in that moment where it happened, or it can reverberate throughout a persons life and be repeated over and over.
Of course, racism and discrimination don't play out in the same ways in every person's life because their other circumstances and identities affect their experiences. Still, the point is that if you can leave your moment of experiencing racialized discrimination relatively unscathed and without having great odds that it will be repeated, it was PROBABLY NOT RACISM. If you leave that moment and go back to a place where you are inherently valued more because of your race, where systems in place privilege you, IT WAS NOT RACISM because you live in a society that has the scales tipped in your favor on the axis of race.
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