Ferdinand was responding to the shameful incident in Paris this week in which Chelsea supporters prevented a black man from boarding a train while chanting: " We're racist and that's the way we like it."
The ex-Manchester United man, now with QPR, wrote on Twitter on Saturday that "complacency" has allowed racism to prevail and reiterated those comments in a column for the Sun on Sunday
But he wrote: "To be fair to the (Football Association), they have done more than most to try to eradicate racism from the stands
"We are the standard-bearers
It's not like going to parts of Eastern Europe when you would be thinking to yourself 'what are we going to get here?'
Even those people who are racists here tend to go into a stadium and turn the mute button on for 90 minutes.
"But the game as a whole has to take a zero-tolerance approach
For years it's been clear than FIFA and UEFA have shied away from doing what they needed to do
They have let football down time and time again."
The incident at the Richelieu-Drouot Metro station, which occurred ahead of Chelsea's Champions League game against Paris St Germain on Tuesday, was captured in mobile phone footage, which Ferdinand views as a positive development.
"The good thing to come out of what happened is that it showed how society is now so full of camera phones that to think you can get away with that sort of behaviour is crazy," he wrote.
"Social media platforms help identify people
Anyone who acts like this and gets caught will be embarrassed when they go to work now.
"But we need to find a way of weeding out the people with these ignorant feelings and help educate them
Just punishing them is not enough."
Source : PA
Source: PA