I totally disagree that in the new formation of the racial landscape of our country, "white" will become a minority. To define minority on basis of skin pigmentation is to presume that the solution against racism is to become homogenized into one collective pool of skin tone that does not necessarily look Aryan, Asiatic or Negroid. But rather a mixture of all the above, depending on the trace most preferred. Most Jewish in America when they are asked about their race will likely answer white. Yet during the Third Reich they were looked down on as an inferior race.
The term minority to my understanding implies that you have to be in a less-represented political, educational, and economical sphere of sociological influence: To be a minority you have to have a cultural experience that is not the dominant one.
The problem with the race debate in our country, is that any racial discussion is always demarcated on a dual terminology to define both black and white. The race debate is automatically linked to define all aspects within a racial experience, including cultural ones, to be determined by the biologically black and white zones, therefore relegating any cultural manifestations within those zones, as subjugated acts. It assumes that if you are black or white, your preferences, ideas, likes or dislikes are white or black as well, and that any opposing view you will have against members of the opposite race will be because of your own skin color. Hispanics and Asians on the other hand are relegated to a gray zone, left out from the debate. No one asks what a Harvard Asian thinks. It's understood they can go either way. But no one is presume to have mixed thoughts. That would be some sort of forbidden intellectual miscegenation.
Within this framework any political stance that you will take to gain access to a dominant position will mean that either you are a white lover or black hater or vice versa. This is why the Skip Gates arrest and the discourse thereafter was so interesting to watch because it immediately assumed that it was just a black and white matter. The idea of police force versus academic privilege was never in the headlines.