Time to throw the cat in amongst the pigeons.
There is more than one definition of racism. This isn't new, illogical, unexpected, a change, or even very recent. It's just that is makes a difference when talking about racism whether you are dealing the issue from the point of view of the victims, or the perpetrators/accused.
If you're black, then racism is about its manifestations and power to do you harm. It's about looking at the different ways racism can do you harm, and how to avoid or mitigate that. In this case it's most definitely about power, not individual attitudes. A guy who hates black people isn't going to cause you any trouble unless he has power over you. A guy who has power over you can cause you trouble over your race irrespective of what his individual attitudes are.
If you're white, then racism is only encountered in terms of an accusation about an individual or group. In looking at individuals or groups it's most useful to work out whether they hate or habitually harm black people, a fairly reliable indicator that racial strife will occur. It's also very useful to relegate racial problems to being the personal problems of a sub-group, which are easy (for you) to identify and distance yourself from, thus 'solving' the problem without ever having to look at your own conduct.
Let's take an example. One of the most common forms of racism indulged in by white people with positive or neutral views about blacks as individuals, is to treat their own culture as default, and any variation on that as something that has to be justified. They can do that because they're part of the majority group, and their own ideas about what is fair and normal and what is not are shared by both their immediate peers and the wider culture. People of a different ethnic background have to learn these differences. This practice systematically discriminates against blacks, in favour of whites, and doesn't involve anyone disliking or wishing harm to blacks at all.
It's also fascinating to watch in action. Here on this very thread we have a couple of white people demanding that their own idea of racism, based around a definition used by perpetrators rather than victims of racism, be treated not just equally, but as the default for the discussion, rather than one more typically used by victims of racism (and academics). They're explicitly arguing for it on the grounds that the definition used by victims is 'uncommon, very unusual, not one most people understand', or to put it more simply, not the one they're used to. Which means, since they're part of the majority culture, that it must be wrong.
I think it would be better if all involved to specify what they mean by racism when they use the term. I'm not sure the split is really racism(individual) versus racism(institutional) though. I think it's more about whether you see racism as being an attitude you hold, or an effect that your behaviour has on others. If you're talking about the first, then you need to deal with Loren's contention that it's a solved problem - we simply don't have the widespread, socially accepted racial hatred and blatant discrimination that we used to, and while it's not as rare as it should be, it's not the major feature of most people's day to day lives that it was a few decades ago. If you're talking about the second, then you're dealing with a widespread and difficult issue.
There is more than one definition of racism. This isn't new, illogical, unexpected, a change, or even very recent. It's just that is makes a difference when talking about racism whether you are dealing the issue from the point of view of the victims, or the perpetrators/accused.
If you're black, then racism is about its manifestations and power to do you harm. It's about looking at the different ways racism can do you harm, and how to avoid or mitigate that. In this case it's most definitely about power, not individual attitudes. A guy who hates black people isn't going to cause you any trouble unless he has power over you. A guy who has power over you can cause you trouble over your race irrespective of what his individual attitudes are.
If you're white, then racism is only encountered in terms of an accusation about an individual or group. In looking at individuals or groups it's most useful to work out whether they hate or habitually harm black people, a fairly reliable indicator that racial strife will occur. It's also very useful to relegate racial problems to being the personal problems of a sub-group, which are easy (for you) to identify and distance yourself from, thus 'solving' the problem without ever having to look at your own conduct.
Let's take an example. One of the most common forms of racism indulged in by white people with positive or neutral views about blacks as individuals, is to treat their own culture as default, and any variation on that as something that has to be justified. They can do that because they're part of the majority group, and their own ideas about what is fair and normal and what is not are shared by both their immediate peers and the wider culture. People of a different ethnic background have to learn these differences. This practice systematically discriminates against blacks, in favour of whites, and doesn't involve anyone disliking or wishing harm to blacks at all.
It's also fascinating to watch in action. Here on this very thread we have a couple of white people demanding that their own idea of racism, based around a definition used by perpetrators rather than victims of racism, be treated not just equally, but as the default for the discussion, rather than one more typically used by victims of racism (and academics). They're explicitly arguing for it on the grounds that the definition used by victims is 'uncommon, very unusual, not one most people understand', or to put it more simply, not the one they're used to. Which means, since they're part of the majority culture, that it must be wrong.
I think it would be better if all involved to specify what they mean by racism when they use the term. I'm not sure the split is really racism(individual) versus racism(institutional) though. I think it's more about whether you see racism as being an attitude you hold, or an effect that your behaviour has on others. If you're talking about the first, then you need to deal with Loren's contention that it's a solved problem - we simply don't have the widespread, socially accepted racial hatred and blatant discrimination that we used to, and while it's not as rare as it should be, it's not the major feature of most people's day to day lives that it was a few decades ago. If you're talking about the second, then you're dealing with a widespread and difficult issue.