This would depend on us agreeing that Sarley was a racist asshole.
I listed four examples of racism at the beginning of the article. I'm glad those women got fired. Note, no Twitter campaign was necessary for theses women to face consequences. Nobody had to hound their employers. Their disgusting actions spoke for themselves.
There's this trope that society never does anything in the face of racism and it's not true. We could probably have a very productive discussion about the ways society doesn't do enough, but to pretend that in 2021, noboy cares about racism is ridiculous.
In fact, Christian Copper had to refuse to help the police prosecute Amy Cooper (showing that he's more generous of spirit than I am) otherwise she'd have been charged with filing a false report.
My point is that we can't lose all concept of proportionality and nuance in this. Otherwise the very claim of racism becomes meaningless and therefore, genuine racism becomes harder to fight. Sarley made a pretty benign comment which, again, we wouldn't even be discussing it if we shuffled the races arond in any other order. It's the idea that, on a personal level, this black man needs special protection from this white woman that gets to me.