@IFC 1905 posts are quite telling because they show you exactly how black players or people in general are viewed by a significant number in countries like Italy and Spain.
Basically if you’re black, stay in your lane, know your role. Don’t show any personality, don’t be provocative, don’t celebrate goals, don’t react to anything. If you do any of the above, expect racist abuse. The other black players who happen to not do any of these things will not be racially abused, which tells you the problem is the before mentioned black players. That is basically the mentality in these nations.
That’s why you get the constant victim blaming. It’s imbedded in them that black folk are inferior and have to behave in a certain way and essentially shouldn’t step out of line. They are aware racist abuse is wrong but they don’t hold any sort of empathy for the person abused because they can’t relate to that person and they see that person as inferior. You know there’s a gigantic problem in your countries with racism when anytime a footballer gets racially abused, leading professionals in the game react with either of the following
A) He was provocative
B) he shouldn’t have reacted
C) other black players don’t get abused