Many of you may have seen it. A young white Jewish student, Tal, wrote a piece for Time about why he's tired of being told he's privileged. Here's something you might not have seen yet: A black graduate student who goes by @dexdigi beautifully pointed out the tired old fallacies that Tal was spouting as if he'd come up with them for the first time.
Now, here's my take.
Like
Tal, I am a white Jewish man from a working-class background who went
to an elite university (in my case, decades ago). Like Tal, I give a lot
of credit to my parents for their struggle to make sure I got the
opportunities I deserved, and to my grandparents, who struggled with a
new language and culture.
But
unlike Tal, apparently (and definitely unlike some of the commenters on
this thread), I realize that while I was disadvantaged by class and
antisemitism, I never had anyone think I was a janitor instead of a
professor simply because of the color of my skin.
I never had to worry
that someone I thought of as a friend would rape me simply because of my
sex, or attack me violently because I said I was one gender and my
birth certificate said I was another.
I didn't have to be concerned that
doors would literally be shut to me because there were no wheelchair
ramps leading up to them, or that people would see signs of a disease
like MD or CP and assume I was stupid or insane.
I have 99 problems but lack of privilege isn't one of them.
Showing posts with label privilege. Show all posts
Showing posts with label privilege. Show all posts
Thursday, May 8, 2014
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