How do you think we learnt to avoid being eaten by rhinos?
I imagine it was quite easy to learn how to not be eaten by a herbivore. :P
racism is an unfortunate by-product of this cycle. it acts to perpetuate it in many ways, but i'm not really sure if you can say "white privilege is racism"
I agree with this. The two are linked but I think it's rather unfair to consider white privilege as racism.
After all, how many white people CHOSE to be born white into a white family? None.
On the flipside of that you can't seriously blame white privilege on white parents deciding to have white children , because there's no way you can control who someone is attracted to.
It's also rather unfair that burden of removing white privilege seems to be directed towards only white people, but also targeted directly at individuals.
The only way to remove white privilege by creating equality in living conditions/emplyoment/education is to act as a group and demand changes in government, and it needs people of all races to be involved in that.
When an individual is shamed with having white privilege however it leaves them in an entirely unfair pickle.
- As noted above, when did that individual choose to be white and inherit societies preconcieved perception of white people.
- How is an individual supposed to stop using their white privilege?
- Would someone seriously apply for a job as a white person and turn it down because they were hired instead of a black person? Provided you didn't definitively know that you were chosen purely on account of your skin, would anyone be that completely selfless to give another man their job in order to benefit that mans race?
- Should a person born into prosperity in a safe location have to give away all his posessions and home, so he too can live in a ghetto of crime? Would this actually improve the man, or the ghetto or remove his privilege? Can he still not be considered privileged for having the ability to CHOOSE to live in a ghetto?
- Would it make sense for a person to turn down their chance of education because other people don't have that same chance? Would denying yourself an education actually allow you to help people in a meaninful way?
- When a person expresses prejudice to a person on account of their race, and to a white person they are trusting or kind towards, can you actually do anything to make that person think of you as equal with the races he looks down upon?
- Why are the sins of the father placed so heavily on the son? Can a white western male really be held responsible for what his ancestors (or the society of his ancestors) did a century or more ago to other races? Those earlier actions might be the source of white privilege today, but did anyone with white privilege choose for them to occur?
- There might be those who actively make great use of white privilge to their own benefit, but is it really fair to blame them for making use of the benefits and advantages they have access to? Would anyone else truly do differently if they had the same or similar advantages in life?
Clearly it's not fair and equal that white privilege exists, but is it fair to lay the charges at the feet of the individual born into it? Is deeming him guilty of being abhorrent and self-important on account of the colour of his skin not tribal in its own right?
Only in the case of the man born into privilege who uses it to actively oppress other peoples should be condemned. And even in that case, not for having been born white, but for being greedy and selfish.
Of course there is a lot that could be done to bring equality among man and that would remove white privilege, or at least seek to minimise it's effects. But those changes surely have to come as a society of people from various backgrounds and races, not from one single race or individuals.
Those few individuals who seek to condemn others for their "privilege" in no way help themselves or society.
Anyway, those are a few of my bumblings around the matter, written as I procrastinate writing an
essayThis topic is very interesting.
I especially like seeing issues of race from an American perspective. I think it's unique in many ways.
As a country I believe it's had a much more in-grained racism in its society compared to a lot of other western nations.
Racism (particularly towards Black people) exists in other countries too, including the UK, but we've never battled as much with issues of
slavery or
segregation.
There's always room to learn more though.