5/8/2014 10:44:49 AM
good bookI've had a hard time with the semantics of terms like racism, systemic, oppression, etc. This book does a lot to shed light on that. Maybe not enough for me to agree with all its conclusions, especially with its use of terms, but semantics shmemantices... bottom-line is the system is seriously jacked up, and people of color are on the losing end.[Edited on May 8, 2014 at 11:26 AM. Reason : whoops, there]
5/8/2014 11:08:07 AM
giant huge book
5/8/2014 11:08:36 AM
^^^Agree, it's certainly messy/ambiguous. I've always felt that oppression connotes the wrong idea though.
5/8/2014 11:14:40 AM
Systemic discrimination is a better term. That way it doesn't leave out women, homosexuals, people with disabilities, etc.
5/8/2014 12:30:24 PM
5/8/2014 12:33:15 PM
The problem is this:Statistically speaking groups like white men, white women, all men, and all women, are likely to have had advantages that you would call "privilege" the second you assume an individual person has simply because they are a member of that group you're being a stereotypical piece of shit."Privilege" is an excuse to be lazy and pigeonhole people based on their skin or genitalia. It's an unthinking tool to try to silence someone because they're white or a man or heterosexual, wholly independent of that person's experiences and values to the subject.
5/8/2014 1:25:23 PM
^ You're bending in circles to avoid culpability, blind to the fact that you're looking in the wrong places for solutions. Believing that one's self is privileged doesn't help squat compared to knowing that a group is oppressed and that something should be done about it.See first page:
5/8/2014 1:28:58 PM
I have a big problem with the term "Privilege" and how it's thrown around these days.
5/8/2014 1:37:51 PM
I find its ubiquity frustrating, but I think it makes sense as an idea/term. But like someone above mentioned, it suffers from a lot of the problem that other loaded terms like racism have
5/8/2014 2:37:18 PM
I saw a funny article ranking privilege of different groups one time. The premise was how it's sweet to have privilege, it's even sweeter to not have it, since the less privilege you have the more your argument is worth.
5/8/2014 3:40:49 PM
[Edited on May 8, 2014 at 5:04 PM. Reason : misread post]
5/8/2014 5:01:20 PM
5/8/2014 5:37:18 PM
Look at #1 on that list.
5/8/2014 5:42:31 PM
5/9/2014 12:09:03 AM
Using oppressed to describe any subset of adult Americans in 2014 (except perhaps ex-felons of drug related crimes) is a fucking joke.
5/9/2014 12:57:03 AM
5/9/2014 8:53:21 AM
I don't think it's meant to make anyone feel bad. It's just meant to illustrate that certain people have certain advantages. Wearing it as a label is dumb as shit, though.
5/9/2014 9:04:33 AM
i can't take any privilege grouping discussion seriously that ignores money and location
5/9/2014 9:29:59 AM
^Typically, privilege does consider wealth and location; they're just separate from other things.
5/9/2014 10:04:47 AM
5/10/2014 1:02:12 AM
5/14/2014 4:13:22 PM
^this also partially explains why sports are a multi-billion dollar industry... it is an outlet for that particular trait within humanity.
5/14/2014 5:04:56 PM
http://nymag.com/thecut/2014/05/harvard-adds-privilege-checking-to-orientation.htmlHarvard’s Kennedy School Adds Privilege-Checking to New-Student Orientationlol. lots of good quotes in this one.[Edited on May 15, 2014 at 8:33 AM. Reason : .]
5/15/2014 8:32:29 AM
5/15/2014 8:48:57 PM
5/15/2014 9:03:00 PM
wow, white people are loaded:http://www.realclearpolicy.com/blog/2013/04/29/the_racial_wealth_gap_is_growing_499.html
5/15/2014 10:06:46 PM
but but but I'm white and I'm not loaded therefore your argument is invalid(/conservatroll)
5/15/2014 11:09:42 PM
I wonder how the security of knowing that i'd likely inherit hundreds of thousands of dollars one day would affect my general level of confidence and choices...Or the converse, if knowing that i would never likely come into a large sum of money would impact my outlook on life, working, and politics...
5/15/2014 11:44:47 PM
I'm not denying any of the facts posted in this thread.On average white people have it way better than black people in this country.Explain to me how, then, assuming anything about me personally simply because I'm white is different than stereotyping?
5/16/2014 12:51:00 PM
Is it racist to say: in general, African Americans aren't good swimmer?http://www.wral.com/in-pools-young-blacks-drown-at-far-higher-rates/13648660/
5/16/2014 12:57:20 PM
I like how according to that graph above Hispanics, a group that arguably has less privilege and advantage than blacks in this country are out-wealthing the blacks across the last 20 years.
5/16/2014 1:03:04 PM
Why do you like that?
5/16/2014 1:07:07 PM
Maybe he's hispanic and has some ethnic pride.Or maybe he's a racist.Or maybe it's that it raises questions about what are the actual causes of socio-economic disparity.
5/16/2014 1:11:24 PM
5/16/2014 1:19:19 PM
its because of immigration, 1st and 2nd generation immigrants start lots of businesses [Edited on May 16, 2014 at 1:52 PM. Reason : .]
5/16/2014 1:51:57 PM
I'd bet if you drilled into that data you'd find no statistical difference between those lines.But if you did, it would be interesting to break the wealth down by industry to see if construction/the housing boom played a big factor in hispanic's rising wealth. At the peak of the boom, wages for skilled workers in that sector were probably getting pretty competitive, and Hispanics are pretty highly represented in construction.
5/16/2014 2:33:46 PM
^^ yep.It takes a lot of planning and effort and hardship to be an immigrant, thus 1st generation immigrants as a group are self-selected motivated individuals.Whereas the black community started out as a viciously oppressed class in America, hundreds of years ago.Keep in mind blacks have been in this country as long as whites, but trace those lines back, and notice that they started at basically 0 for blacks in the 60s. Contrast this to the line for whites, which probably hasn't been near 0 since the 1800s.Even if you accept Sayer's suggesting that blacks are lower than hispanics because they don't work as hard, this doesn't account for why blacks are even starting from nothing in the first place. That in itself is one of the travesties perpetrated by the American government and people.
5/16/2014 2:41:25 PM
5/16/2014 3:12:35 PM
take it easy bruh, i meant "suggest" in the context of other hypotheses for explaining the data outside of the context of entrenched privilege and nepotism causing wealth to be hoarded amongst white people.
5/16/2014 3:14:25 PM
That's what I figured you meant when you said you "liked" it, or found it "interesting".
5/16/2014 3:24:52 PM
5/16/2014 4:24:44 PM
5/16/2014 6:42:34 PM
http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2014/05/27/not_all_men_how_discussing_women_s_issues_gets_derailed.htmlThis parallels race issues pretty well.
5/28/2014 12:43:06 AM
5/28/2014 1:02:26 AM
ha are you joking...?It's the "listening" that is important, is the point. It's not stay quiet and be quiet for ever, it's listening without being defensive that is key.If your post wasn't a joke, it's demonstrative of the defensiveness the column is describing...
5/28/2014 1:12:23 AM
I mean I understand the listening part, but the "privilege" crowd often seem to subtly imply that the people who have privilege should NEVER talk. At least about any issue that effects the less privileged group. Unless maybe it's to apologize.I don't think it's universally wrong and it's certainly natural to be defensive against a stereotyping of your group. Especially considering an individual in the group has no control over the crazy-ass actions of other members. I doubt the "not all men" hashtag sprang up instantly as some sort of defensive argument, but rather a condemnation of the mens rights types and an encouragement to women that not all men are like that.[Edited on May 28, 2014 at 1:36 AM. Reason : grammar]
5/28/2014 1:31:50 AM
The implication isn't that they should "never" talk, but the ones in a discussion with privilege, by definition, have had more than their/our fair share of talking, which is part of the problem.It's just as important too for people without a privilege to listen to people with a privilege, to understand why they don't understand the nature of their privilege, but others do.The #notallmen hash tag doesn't make sense, because no one is saying it's specifically all men, this is just a deflection or a way of dismissing the problems women are complaining about, which is part of the problem. The correct response, assuming you understand the problem, is to observe when you're being intimidating or sexist without specifically meaning to be, or when your buddy/friend/whatever is doing so, and using your privilege to try and stop it.
5/28/2014 4:17:38 AM
So, essentially it's OK to generalize a person as long as they're either white or a man. Because some white people and some men have had "privileges".Got it.-------------------------------------------#notallmen is a response to the idea: "teach men not to rape". Suggesting that men are inherently rapists is not "problems women are complaining about"; it's sexist garbage but that doesn't matter because it's sexist against men and fuck them.[Edited on May 28, 2014 at 8:45 AM. Reason : .]
5/28/2014 8:43:10 AM
a lot of these campaigns go beyond awareness and seem to imply that men are supposed to be protectors of women's virtue and ignore that women can want and initiate sex. sexual assault campaigns never seem to mention that when two parties are drunk, the man can't give his consent either and seem to imply that if two people have sex its because the man has forced himself on the woman or beguiled her into submitting while ignoring that the opposite may be true instead. but this campaign doesn't seem to be doing that.
5/28/2014 9:14:52 AM