A few points:
1) If you're looking to coast through life on oppression points rather than effort, then no, I guess it was unrealistic of me to assume you'd read the whole thing. On the face of it, you demonstrate a low level of reading comprehension, so perhaps it's true that either you didn't make it all the way through, or at least weren't paying too close attention. But please don't let your own laziness keep you from commenting anyway and jumping to all sorts of conclusions about me or the sincerity of what I was saying. You go, girl.
2) No, I wasn't alluding to some sort of "black supremacy" on your part. If you had actually read "all that", you'd know that I said you're advocating for black defeatism, which is the more logical flip side of white supremacy. Because your world view is so poisoned by anti-white resentment, you need your black brothers and sisters to keep themselves in chains (or at least pretend they're still in chains) in order for you and your anger to feel validated.
3) I never said that hard work in and of itself is all you need to get what you want--it is simply the first step and the foundation. There's many times when I've been denied an opportunity or seen my own hard work be for nothing simply because I wasn't friends with the right people, and I've seen other people be similarly marginalized for reasons that had nothing to do with their skin color. Rather, it has always been and will always be the simple social reality of "office politics". (Thankfully, simply being nice and unassuming--as well as professional--will usually help you move forward.) However, if a person isn't willing to give their best and be professional, then they'll never stand a chance.
4) What you scoff at as some imagined "I have a black friend equivalent", along with your implication that I'm making stuff up, is just evidence that you don't really have any arguments against what I'm saying. So go ahead and trot out the usual talking points, as they're all you have.