Mary Shelley
Fearless & Powerful
- MBTI
- XXXX
[video=youtube_share;GTvU7uUgjUI]http://youtu.be/GTvU7uUgjUI[/video]
we are not privileged to be white. it's got nothing to do with privilege. i am white by accident. no one gave me the gift of whiteness, and i didn't 'achieve' it in any way. white skin is just as irrelevant to anything as any other color.
the advantage her sister in law had in the situation is not a 'privilege'. it's a disgusting indication of how narrow minded and intolerant some people are
unfortunately terms get 'coined' and then they themselves become a problem.This is just semantics. It's the same outcome with only the difference in how the word makes a you feel. You could look at it from a different angle and say that minorities are underprivileged. If you still don't like the word, you have to understand that there is an underlying concept here, and denying it a label is harmful to the recognition of its existence. So call it what you will.
I think you, as well as many other white people don't like the word because it implies you have a special right that is better than the standard. Something better than you already have. However, you have already declared that being yourself is the standard, or at least you feel it should be standard. It's all relative. I understand that you would ideally want all races to be a standard. I understand that you would ideally expect that being treated like a human being should be standard. I understand that you didn't go out of your way to be white, but the cashier went out of her way to be shitty. We're not disputing that any of this is your fault, but you are privileged, because considering a wider context, minorities aren't privileged.
Racism exists for all races, but to demonstrate that it's not evenly distributed, as an example, it's disproportionately against blacks. The point here is to assert that there is a general advantage to being white, and to a lesser extent, non-black. And the point that I am saying this is because we have to address this as a premise to arguments made about racism. For example, I cannot let anyone imply that we're all treated the same despite race. I cannot let anyone imply that a few shitty people as the source of hatred and ignorance refutes the point at which disadvantage is delivered.if people stopped playing the skin color card every time some injustice is done perhaps we as a society could move forward past it.
just sayin'
Racism exists for all races, but to demonstrate that it's not evenly distributed, as an example, it's disproportionately against blacks. The point here is to assert that there is a general advantage to being white, and to a lesser extent, non-black. And the point that I am saying this is because we have to address this as a premise to arguments made about racism. For example, I cannot let anyone imply that we're all treated the same despite race. I cannot let anyone imply that a few shitty people as the source of hatred and ignorance refutes the point at which disadvantage is delivered.
I'm pretty sure that we're not going to move past racism if a few people stop playing the race card.
Every time racism is discussed, the one consistent thing that is expressed is "please stop talking about racism".
If you feel uncomfortable talking about it, you don't have to continue, but don't you think it's unfair that simply talking about it is akin to playing the race card? I know you didn't explicitly say I'm playing the race card, but the undertones are implying I'm (or anyone) a bad person if we continue to talk about race.
Also, please be aware that I wont equate arguing about racism with being racist. So feel free to express your opinion.
as a customer, the second woman had the right to be treated in the same manner as the first one. the end. had she said that right off the bat the whole situation would have played out differently. think about it.
actually it is represented in reality. i am one person who is an example of that, but there are countless others who have also moved past the labeling game.I completely agree. But your idealism isn't represented in reality. So in the mean time, people are talking about the underlying problem. Obviously this wouldn't be a recurring topic if there weren't a problem. This is the way of the world - the oppressed will speak out on their problems until the issues are gone. Just as there are feminists and gay rights activists, there are others telling them to shut up, and that they are tired of listening to their shit.
Suggesting that we take the appropriate action is no more productive than discussions of race that assert racism is wrong. Do not confuse actually taking the right action with talking about taking the right action. It would be like me saying that racism doesn't exist, and it suddenly vanished from earth.
Racism isn't just the KKK. It isn't just outward hatred. The power of racism is in its subtlety. The subconscious decisions we make that places one person ahead of another. I wouldn't be surprised if that cashier didn't even know she was doing anything wrong until she was confronted by her white peers.
i go about my life without that blanket label. i look at each individual injustice for what it is in that situation. that is the way problems get addressed, not by putting a label on it and speaking out about the label. racism causes a lot of problems that's true. talking about how it does isn't the answer.
http://voices.yahoo.com/rosa-parks-black-woman-changed-nation-10029.html
this woman made incredible changes by acting against an injustice. she did not sit there and talk about privilege or racism, she simply acted according to her right as a human being, regardless if that was acknowledged by anyone. she took her right.
This is just semantics. It's the same outcome with only the difference in how the word makes a you feel. You could look at it from a different angle and say that minorities are underprivileged. If you still don't like the word, you have to understand that there is an underlying concept here, and denying it a label is harmful to the recognition of its existence. So call it what you will.
I think you, as well as many other white people don't like the word because it implies you have a special right that is better than the standard. Something better than you already have. However, you have already declared that being yourself is the standard, or at least you feel it should be standard. It's all relative. I understand that you would ideally want all races to be a standard. I understand that you would ideally expect that being treated like a human being should be standard. I understand that you didn't go out of your way to be white, but the cashier went out of her way to be shitty. We're not disputing that any of this is your fault, but you are privileged, because considering a wider context, minorities aren't privileged.
If I'm privileged to be white then aren't I also privileged to be alive, to be born in place of relative peace, to have a family that loves me, to suffer few infirmities, to be mentally healthy etc etc.
Of all of these privileges being white is the least of them.
+1If I'm privileged to be white then aren't I also privileged to be alive, to be born in place of relative peace, to have a family that loves me, to suffer few infirmities, to be mentally healthy etc etc. Of all of these privileges being white is the least of them.
Your proposed premise is not required for the conclusion.
I doubt you fully understand the impact of not being white. Regardless, I don't understand why you're comparing these randomly selected privileges. It's arbitrary unless you're suggesting non-whites should be happy the're alive, and not be unhappy for the millions of other things that typically cause people to be unhappy. Ironically no one is unhappy when they're dead, so are you suggesting we should force ourselves to be happy? And to do so without taking the required steps? Or are you telling minorities to shut the fuck up?
What you just said:
"Getting shot in the face is worse than being black (although on rare occasions, they're coincidentally equal), so shut the fuck up"
To shake things up, and to hopefully have you think, you said this while your friend is holding a gun, and you swear you have no control over what he does.
how did this become a discussion about my opinion? i never said discussions about racism shouldn't happen. i simply stated my opinion that rather than be a victim of it, this woman could have taken action against the injustice. i believe there would have been a much more positive outcome, not only with regard to how people are treated at that store, but also that woman would have empowered herself and made a real difference in the eyes of her daughter.
she chose not to, and now it's a video about racism rather than a video about one woman defending her rights and leading a very excellent example for her daughter. do you now understand?
you are picking me apart for something irrelevant to what i've been trying to say.
i can't be bothered anymore to explain it. if you don't get it that's fine, but don't misconstrue ok?