Swift wrote:I'm tired of being made to feel guilty for my existence and for things over which I had no control.
SciFiFisher wrote:I like the explanation of Intersectionality. But, I am not convinced that my "privilege" comes from the fact that I am a white middle class male so much as it comes from the fact that I am an educated middle class person.
SciFi Chick wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:I like the explanation of Intersectionality. But, I am not convinced that my "privilege" comes from the fact that I am a white middle class male so much as it comes from the fact that I am an educated middle class person.
The premise here is that it was easier for you to become an educated middle class person because you were born into the middle class as a white male. You had it easier than a woman in the same position, and you had it much easier than a woman in poverty. But you shouldn't feel guilty about this fact - just be aware of it. See my post to swift.
Swift wrote:I'm tired of being made to feel guilty for my existence and for things over which I had no control.
squ1d wrote:Swift wrote:I'm tired of being made to feel guilty for my existence and for things over which I had no control.
Me three. I also think that discussions of privilege generally tend to swing between statements of the bleeding obvious and the use of the word as a weapon against people to dismiss their opinions in a display of argumentum ad hominem.
SciFiFisher wrote:
So, no matter how times people explain to me how privileged I am for being a white male I have to stop, listen to the explanation, and simply say "why bless your heart, I am sure you mean well".
SciFi Chick wrote:Did you read the article or my response to swift? I mean, to me, privilege is nothing more than a comparison of who has it generally easier in society. It's similar to a man's strength vs. a woman's strength. Say my husband can carry 50KG and I can only carry 25KG. That means, if we have 50KG of groceries in the car, I have to work harder to carry it to the house than he does. That's nothing for him to feel guilty about, but it takes more work for me to do it than it does for him. Why are we not allowed to acknowledge these things?
Gullible Jones wrote:Umm, did you actually read what she had to say about guilt?
SciFi Chick wrote:Swift wrote:I'm tired of being made to feel guilty for my existence and for things over which I had no control.
I have to agree with GJ. The article addresses guilt. You should feel no guilt whatsoever. But if you understand the inherent privilege you've had, it should make you less judgmental of those who had more to overcome (assuming you were judgmental to begin with).
I saw a comic that summed it up nicely. A teacher put a trash can in the front of the classroom. Then, he gave everyone a piece of paper and told them to crumple it up. The next goal was to toss it into the trash can, but you had to do it from wherever you were sitting in the classroom. Naturally, everyone in the back felt it was unfair, because it was unfair. More people in the front of the room got their paper into the trash can then people from the back of the room.
The people in the front of the room should not feel any guilt as they didn't know what would happen when they sat in those chairs. But it doesn't change the fact that they had it easier. Does that make sense?
To put it another way - you're tired of feeling guilty for what you consider "so-called privilege". Well, I'm tired of feeling guilty for not being as successful as those with privilege, as though it's my own fault that I wasn't born with that privilege.
SciFi Chick wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:
So, no matter how times people explain to me how privileged I am for being a white male I have to stop, listen to the explanation, and simply say "why bless your heart, I am sure you mean well".
Here's the thing - in our society, no matter how hard your circumstances were, if you put a woman or a minority male in the same situation, they have all the obstacles you had along with the obstacles of things like not being taken seriously because of being female, or getting stopped by cops for driving while black. There really is a difference. Why is this so hard to grasp?
SciFi Chick wrote:squ1d wrote:Swift wrote:I'm tired of being made to feel guilty for my existence and for things over which I had no control.
Me three. I also think that discussions of privilege generally tend to swing between statements of the bleeding obvious and the use of the word as a weapon against people to dismiss their opinions in a display of argumentum ad hominem.
Did you read the article or my response to swift? I mean, to me, privilege is nothing more than a comparison of who has it generally easier in society. It's similar to a man's strength vs. a woman's strength. Say my husband can carry 50KG and I can only carry 25KG. That means, if we have 50KG of groceries in the car, I have to work harder to carry it to the house than he does. That's nothing for him to feel guilty about, but it takes more work for me to do it than it does for him. Why are we not allowed to acknowledge these things?
Gullible Jones wrote:
I feel like this post needs a 'Like' button...
Guys: nobody is saying that you have it easy.
As the article says, there are different kinds privilege people can have, by being included in one or another group. Different kinds of privilege are not necessarily equivalent, or even similar.
Seriously, just read the article, it does a better job explaining this.
Swift wrote:I think a lot of people use the term "privilege" as a weapon - "Don't feel guilty, but look how much better/easier you had it than I did".
As soon as one gets into such a discussion it becomes, "yes, I'm white, but I had this problem or that problem I had to overcome". It becomes a battle of who had it worse ("uphill, both ways, in a blizzard..."); a discussion I dislike as much as "who had it better".
I'm tired of us (humans) classifying individuals as groups. I'm tired of being judged as a white, middle-class, middle-aged male, as if that says everything about me; I'm as tired of it as a young, 20-something black male must be of being judged by how he appears.
I'm tired of this whole debate and the search for misery. And I obviously need to get out of this thread...
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