Your argument makes much more sense if you substitute capitalism for racism. We currently live in a world where Biden's promise to nominate a black woman to the Supreme Court is seen as a political advantage. (The price of his announcement is now she'll always be seen as a token—LBJ was much smarter when nominating Thurgood Marshall. Biden should've just said he would choose the best person, then chosen a black woman.)
I see you're from the second-most privileged ethnic group in the US. It is significant that privileged people would much rather talk about race than class.
As for your dismissal of poor white people, that seems to be the price for believing in privilege theory: the bourgeoisie of color get to feel virtuous about their ability to exploit the working class, and they get to sneer at poor white people for having been born poor and white.
But I don't mean to imply the bourgeoisie of color are only indifferent to white poverty. In general, they're like the white bourgeoisie, indifferent to all poverty, which we could end in a month with Basic Income, and which would disproportionately help people of color because they are disproportionately poor.
Ah, well. Good luck making a better world by trying to keep people in tidy racial categories. I'll focus on doing what I can for the entire diverse working class.