Nah.
These films went OUT OF THEIR WAY to have a diverse cast
So-called "diversity" means nothing when one is either a tokenized chess piece for "flavor"/checking off boxes (as I've said about James Olsen on
Supergirl as opposed to the rich character development on
Black Lightning), or the essence of the subject of this diversity (Finn) is played as a 1930s racial caricature. I do not expect you to see or understand that, but that
is Finn. The Old Hollywood racial stereotype of a black man in a socially subservient position (he worked in sanitation while apparently moonlighting as a trooper with no experience that could have been used as a partial springboard for his guilt over killing and how the FO likely used troops to kidnap him/harm his family/strip him of his identity, etc....but nope) and is always running in a state of panting panic. That's how the SW-PTB introduced a new black male character into the SW film franchise.
Finn has plenty of comedy moments, but so do the other cast members.
Rey? Hardly. She was created to be nearly flawless and often morose, so she as a source of comedy could not work; what humor there was happened to be centered on her reactions to--you guessed it--Finn.
Poe? Aside from barely being developed at all, the SW-PTB could not decide if they wanted to make him some Devil-may-care, surrogate/NextGen Han and someone who was supposed to be more responsible, given his position, but he still walked away from the ST with not an ounce of the buffoon
anvil-ed on his head like Finn.
The casting and portrayal of Finn is NOT racist, and neither are king Bob's comments.
Yes, they are. You can argue/deny that until the end of time, but King Bob made assumptions about a character's presentation based on subjects he knows nothing about, and attacked someone he assumed was white to support his offensive statements. When he was corrected, he continued with yet another racist, foolish statement in the wake of everything posted. .