Joey is wrong here, or at least confused. Only individuals can be racist (and of course, racist individuals can band together, and they often do). A race (in the usual sense of the term) cannot inherently be racist--people would have to be born that way, and there's no evidence I'm aware of that this is the case. Individuals learn or are taught to be racist. So the white race (whatever that means) can't be intrinsically racist. This would actually support Joey's point (if he had one).
But I doubt that many people believe that all white people are inherently racist simply because they're white.
On the other hand, if we look at the impact of racism in terms of who benefits from it and who is harmed by it, it's likely that white people as a group aren't harmed by racism against whites, while black people as a group even today suffer from the consequences of racism against blacks.
Nor do blacks or other race-designated groups benefit from racism against whites (affirmative action programs don't count because they're not based on the premise that one race is inherently inferior). But white people as a group do benefit from historical and continuing racism against blacks. If you're white and you're not actively redressing / correcting racism, then it doesn't matter that much if you don't harbor racist beliefs. This is why Dr. King told the Episcopal bishops in the Letter from Birmingham Jail that as gradualists, they were more dangeroud (my paraphrase) than overt racists like Bull Connor.