Look, I think we've reached the actual core of the disagreement, so let me put it plainly.
You're now treating white supremacy as something sui generis — a kind with no genus, a system that doesn't belong to any broader category alongside caste, Han policy over Uyghurs, or the Arab slave trade. As long as you can deny the common genus, my counterexamples don't touch you, because they're not counterexamples of anything. I get the move. But it costs you more than you think
First problem: you already compared them yourself. You said those other systems are "less impactful." But comparisons of degree presuppose a common dimension, you can only rank things that share a genus. If caste and white supremacy can be measured on the same scale of "impact of ethnic domination," then they belong to the same category, and you admitted it in the act of ranking them. If they don't belong to the same category, then "less impactful" is meaningless — like saying Wednesday is less yellow than justice. You can't have both.
Second: name the property. What exactly does white supremacy have that caste, Han policy and the Arab slave trade lack, which justifies reserving the word "racism" for it alone? Walk through the options. Structural power? They all have it. Pseudo-biological ideology? Nazi antisemitism had it and wasn't white-on-nonwhite; Xinjiang biopolitics has it right now; and Iberian limpieza de sangre predates racial science entirely. Global reach? That's an extrinsic property, a matter of degree — it tells you which instance of a genus is the largest, it never defines the genus. English is the most globalized language on earth; that doesn't make Guarani not a language. The Black Death was the most global epidemic of its era; local epidemics were still diseases. And if the property is simply "perpetrated by whites" — then the definition is circular, and you've been assuming your conclusion the whole time.
Last thing. Consider what your position actually implies. If only Europeans and their descendants are capable of generating racial domination, if the rest of humanity, across five thousand years of civilizations, empires and hierarchies, never managed to produce anything of the same kind, then you've made Europe the sole true subject of history and everyone else a patient. That's European exceptionalism with the moral sign flipped. I'd find that anthropologically indefensible and, frankly, condescending toward the entire non-Western world.
To be clear about what I'm not saying: I'm not denying the historical specificity of Atlantic racial capitalism, its scale, or its documented ongoing effects. Largest instance of the genus, quite possibly. But "largest instance" is a claim of degree, and your original claim was categorical. Specificity doesn't grant a conceptual monopoly.
You're now treating white supremacy as something sui generis — a kind with no genus, a system that doesn't belong to any broader category alongside caste, Han policy over Uyghurs, or the Arab slave trade. As long as you can deny the common genus, my counterexamples don't touch you, because they're not counterexamples of anything. I get the move. But it costs you more than you think
First problem: you already compared them yourself. You said those other systems are "less impactful." But comparisons of degree presuppose a common dimension, you can only rank things that share a genus. If caste and white supremacy can be measured on the same scale of "impact of ethnic domination," then they belong to the same category, and you admitted it in the act of ranking them. If they don't belong to the same category, then "less impactful" is meaningless — like saying Wednesday is less yellow than justice. You can't have both.
Second: name the property. What exactly does white supremacy have that caste, Han policy and the Arab slave trade lack, which justifies reserving the word "racism" for it alone? Walk through the options. Structural power? They all have it. Pseudo-biological ideology? Nazi antisemitism had it and wasn't white-on-nonwhite; Xinjiang biopolitics has it right now; and Iberian limpieza de sangre predates racial science entirely. Global reach? That's an extrinsic property, a matter of degree — it tells you which instance of a genus is the largest, it never defines the genus. English is the most globalized language on earth; that doesn't make Guarani not a language. The Black Death was the most global epidemic of its era; local epidemics were still diseases. And if the property is simply "perpetrated by whites" — then the definition is circular, and you've been assuming your conclusion the whole time.
Last thing. Consider what your position actually implies. If only Europeans and their descendants are capable of generating racial domination, if the rest of humanity, across five thousand years of civilizations, empires and hierarchies, never managed to produce anything of the same kind, then you've made Europe the sole true subject of history and everyone else a patient. That's European exceptionalism with the moral sign flipped. I'd find that anthropologically indefensible and, frankly, condescending toward the entire non-Western world.
To be clear about what I'm not saying: I'm not denying the historical specificity of Atlantic racial capitalism, its scale, or its documented ongoing effects. Largest instance of the genus, quite possibly. But "largest instance" is a claim of degree, and your original claim was categorical. Specificity doesn't grant a conceptual monopoly.




