Nope.
"Bad" person = someone who naturally or at least habitually does bad things.
If you like "bad" games/movies/books/poems/works of fiction that make most people lose faith in mankind or games someone labels as being racist and worthy of being burned, you're probably doing the right thing by checking it out before insta-hating it.
Sometimes, you'll find yourself knee-deep in crap, sometimes you'll actually like what someone else plain hates. Technically, the first "Juarez" title showed me I probably need a new PC soon. The second one I didn't like. The Cartel, I think I chose to ignore because I really, really dislike cartels.
Most of the time, my personal taste conforms with what a lot of others have to say about games. I felt hugely let down by Duke Nukem Forever. I hated Dragon Age II, still do. But then again, I have absolutely no clue what's so great about Mass Effect, and I still like the trip I had with Jericho, even though the game had me rage-quitting at least a dozen times. But then again, I also liked Fallout 3, even though I have little sympathy for Bethesda, and of the gadzillion bugs and hiccups and freezes the game threw in my face only two were sort of funny. All these games (and a lot more, to be honest) could be called racist or otherwise wrong if we oversimplify or project too much of our own crap into them. Thing is, in 2011, it's highly improbable (or at least very, very rare) to find real, proper, intended racism in a mass-marketed piece of consumable. Most stories written and made available in an interactive manner will have a look at the real bad guys out there, in the real world. People who do bad things in an organized manner, such as manufacturing, trafficking and selling drugs or enslaving/impregnating/killing/devouring mostly innocent creatures (including American women) clearly qualify as bad persons, be they real of fictional.
Extra Credits had me entertained for a while, but I never agreed with it as I do with, say, Zero Punctuation or the Honourable Reverend Jim, Esq. EC just doesn't go down well with the me-crowd. And the smurf-voice has lost its charm very easily, especially once you have the Audacity to listen to it in re-naturalized form. Just not my cup of tea.
If someone calls you a racist, a punk or a creep, there's always the chance that, in fact, you are just that. Most of the time, though, they have no clue about what they're talking about. Annoying and murderous pricks come from any race/creed/culture available, I would be rather bored by only being served evil white men as bad guys in games for the rest of my consumerist escapist life.