A first point:
You've posted on a UK-based site. We welcome questions (and answers!) from all over the world but you're not going to get many responses within the next few hours because it's gone 2am here and most site members are in bed.
A subsidiary point:
You need to recognise that US references (such as "I have have always been on the Democratic side of things" and "affirmative action movements") tend to be meaningless to us.
Next point:
Your question title "Getting Bullied at school" (on your other thread) or "Bully at school" (here) doesn't seem to relate particularly well to your question. You've not said how you're being bullied, or by whom. Without such information it's hard to suggest a course of action.
A challenge to your statement:
You wrote "everybody knows that only white people can be racist".
That's utter and complete rubbish. I've met white racists, black racists and Asian racists. Fortunately they're all very much in a minority (and largely laughed at by the rest of UK society) but racism isn't restricted to any one community.
A challenge to your definitions:
Religious intolerance is not the same as racism, which you seem to think it is.
A challenge to your perceptions:
The Muslim faith promotes peace at least as much as any other faith does. (Yes, there are a few fundamentalists who advocate violence but they certainly don't include the Muslim Brotherhood. If you're so dedicated to searching the web for information I suggest actually bothering to read the Ihkwanweb site's information:
http://www.ikhwanweb.com/ )
A further challenge:
I've never even heard of the 'Black Hebrew church', and neither has Google!
Judaism has probably been subjected to more intolerance and hatred than any other faith; I find it hard to see how any Jew could exhibit the racial intolerance you suggest.
Like you, I believe in science and rationalism. That makes me an atheist who detests all religions (so my defence of religious groups, above, certainly doesn't come about through any bias towards them!).
However I go out into the real world (away from what's written on the internet), where I meet people of all races and all religions without any need for fear.
Question:
How many hours in the last week have you spent in casual conversation with Jews, Muslims, members of the black community, Asians, etc? If you actually get away from your computer and start mixing with those whom you seem to fear you'll find that the world isn't such a scarey place after all!
Chris