Its absolutely not 'white supremacist'. White people do not understand that non-white people have completely different experiences in the world. An Asian child, woman, man each have a unique experience. Likewise for black people, Hispanic people, etc. A white person knows nothing about that and therefore is ill-equipped to handle, properly teach that child about themselves and how to navigate through the world, dealing with racism and discrimination.
Its also not OK for them to adopt minority children and have them living in areas where they are the sole minority, surrounded by noth… Read moreing but white people, where they never see anyone else like them, and are never shown positive examples of people like them. This belief that all the child needs is love, is wrong. That is a basic need, like food, shelter, education. But our society treats people differently based on gender, race, ability (disabled or able-bodied), ( and appearance for that matter but that's a different argument). The child needs people around them that can relate to that experience. White people cannot relate to the black experience. They don't even make movies with mostly black casts without referring to it as a 'black movie'. Yet almost every other movie has mainly all white people but is not referred to as a movie for white people. White people still as a whole do not see the humanity in other minorities, especially black, so no, they do not relate to the black experience at all. (Also, growing up poor has no relation or relevance to being black either - for anyone who wants to make that counterargument).
If you had adopted a child with a disability, you should provide enough resources for them to have other friends their age who are similar that they can relate to, and also see adults who have their condition and are successful.
Why is it that many parents want another child so their first-born has a sibling to relate to, but you can't see how having a black or other minority child would also need someone like them to relate to?