Try looking in the mirror
Very good, using somebody else's approach to turn it back on them. I like it; you're learning, very slowly but at least learning.
Thing is though, it's not true. Remember that other bit of advice I also gave you about putting outright false accusations to bed. The reason why we do that is because if you don't they become tacitly accepted as a truth or holding some (false) basis, which can then slip into a general wider acceptance or even be weaponised at a later time against an individual or even organisation.
I find individuals are a bit hit and miss with this. Some defend themselves well, whereas others just cave under the pressure and apologise (on occasions when they really shouldn't) and then they truly are in a world of woe because there is no way back from that. It's a tactic that extremists use, for example when they are building a cancel campaign against somebody; and especially once you have apologised they have you nailed.
Of course if a person has genuinely said something wrong (remember that other further bit of advice) then an individual should own it,
but be very clear and careful what exactly they are apologising for. Organisations on the other hand are typically just crap at their PR tactics and seem forever trying to be outdoing each other to hoover up every last scrap of criticism lobbed their way regardless of whether it is totally or partially bollocks. And then lo and behold it becomes automatically accepted, for example the police are
institutionally racist. Good luck to them trying to shake that tag.....ever.
So this is the point where if you don't believe you are an extreme left person (as I have suggested) you may want to call that out *; unless of course you are one
Stay tuned, I'll educate you as and when things crop up.
*Would you like to know some effective different approaches as to how you can do this?