She didn't say that. Unless you're admitting that all the extremists on social media are white. But trump has said:
Exclusive: Trump Says ‘Anti-White Feeling’ Is a Problem in the U.S.
If elected to a second term in the White House, Donald Trump intends to pursue policies that would address what he says is a "definite anti-white feeling" in America.
“If you look at the Biden Administration, they’re sort of against anybody depending on certain views,” Trump tells TIME in an interview when asked about his supporters
who believe anti-white racism now represents a greater problem than anti-Black racism. “They’re against Catholics. They’re against a lot of different people… I think there is a definite anti-white feeling in this country and that can’t be allowed either.”
“I don’t think it would be a very tough thing to address, frankly,” Trump says. “But I think the laws are very unfair right now. And education is being very unfair, and it’s being stifled. But I don’t think it’s going to be a big problem at all. But if you look right now, there’s absolutely a bias against white [people] and that’s a problem.”
"I think there is a definite anti-white feeling in this country and that can’t be allowed either," Trump tells TIME.
time.com
Inside Trump's plan to fight 'anti-white racism' in the White House
Last year, a survey of more than 1,500 people who'd voted for Donald Trump in the 2020 election found a significant majority of the former president's supporters believed that "racism against white Americans has become a bigger problem than racism against Black Americans." The Yahoo/YouGov poll's results are not entirely shocking: throughout his time in the public eye, Trump has unabashedly stoked a series of racist fires, and at the same time overtly rejected many of the historical truths about America's bigoted past. It follows, then, that many of his followers would themselves have a skewed sense of American racism, how it operates, and who it affects.
Now, with the very real prospect of a second term in office on the horizon, Trump and his team of advisers have begun working on plans to federalize one vector of that inverted interpretation of discrimination. Should voters return Trump to the White House, his next Justice Department will likely "dramatically change the government's interpretation of Civil Rights-era laws to focus on 'anti-white racism' rather than discrimination against people of color," Axios reported this month, noting that many of Trump's allies have begun "laying legal groundwork" for such an enterprise already. And within the "flurry of lawsuits and legal complaints" designed to set the stage for a subsequent civil-rights inversion, some have "been successful."
The former president is planning to fundamentally flip America's civil rights protections if he wins a second term in office
theweek.com