You realize the implicit argument there, right?
Don't put words in my mouth, you sound like CNN "journalist".
> I'm looking at the generation of white males in their 30 and it is just sad. What was done to their dreams and opportunities was a crime.
Does the same not apply to all the black males, females, etc., who were graduating and entering the job market during the financial crisis of 2008?
It is not as though your observations are incorrect, they are incomplete, and this is what the parent comment was alluding to, and what many people just don't have a contextual basis for understanding. The term "racism" in the US generally refers to hundreds of years of systematic prejudice and violence against people of color, that is still ongoing today. Discrimination against people based on their skin color - for example against white people - is morally abhorrent but in a completely different category. It is hard to see white privilege when you are white living among white people, it's just a fact of life. If you really want to understand, you'll have to try to see the world from a different viewpoint. The lack of this viewpoint is why you feel people are trying to put words in your mouth, it's nothing personal, it's a systemic problem in which all of us to a greater or lesser extent play a part.