Actually, it's perfectly correct.
I know that your crackpot notions demand that color somehow be an inherent property of light -- because if it's not, then your consciousness-without-a-cause model falls apart -- but we can do a simple thought experiment to illustrate why it can't be.
Suppose you're sitting on your porch with your dog and a couple of friends. One of those friends has tritonopia, and another has just eaten a little psilocybin mushroom.
You're all facing the sky.
Light from the sky is bouncing off your faces.
That light has a certain wavelength, frequency, and amplitude.
That's all you can say.
But when it bounces off the eyes of you and your friends and your dog, that causes an electrochemical reaction inside your heads.
As a result -- at a later point, at which time the light itself is off somewhere else -- your brain performs blue.
Your dog's brain, however, performs a shade of gray.
The brain of your friend with tritanopia performs a dark green.
The brain of your friend who ate the mushroom performs a bright yellow.
It makes no sense to say that somehow one of those brains' responses is somehow an inherent property of the now-distant light that triggered the response, especially -- as if that weren't odd enough -- if you also say that none of the other brains' responses are inherent properties of the light.
Like I said, there's no more color in light than there is pain in a bullet.