When I speak about racism, am I generally more worried about how white people will feel, react, or think of me than I am about how people of color will?
Does my Church, my workplace, my classroom consider mainly the sensitives, comfort and concerns of white people?
Billy Critchley-Menor, SJ, points the antiracism conversation in the right direction when he explains that it is about White people being held accountable to People of Color. White supremacy has shaped society around the accountability of White people. Antiracism refocuses our attention so we are held accountable by the oppressed in our society; those in whom Jesus lives according to the Gospels.