Thursday 20 June 2019

Who Really Should be Checking Their Privilege?



There's been a lot of talk in North America, the EU and much of Western society about privilege.  How the privileged have too long been in positions of power.  There's talk that people with privilege should stop talking and let the less privileged have their time.

Fair enough.

But who exactly has "privilege" when taking the entire world in context?  Let's look at a few examples:

If you live in a place where you can poop and pee in a shiny bowl indoors and you won't have to worry about it coming back up or running through the streets and causing massive cholera outbreaks, then you're privileged.

If you have a temperature-controlled waterfall (a.k.a. shower) inside your home that you can use on a daily basis to clean yourself with, then you're privileged.

If you can pull out a small electronic device in your pocket and push some buttons to access the entirety of human knowledge in seconds, then you're privileged.

If you can get all the food you want brought to your home without having to set foot outside and interact with a human being, then you're privileged.

If you're able to read this blog on any device that would have been considered "magical" by people from 100 years ago, then you're privileged.

If you live in a society where the illnesses that kill you are mainly due to an over-abundance of high-calorie foods, then you're privileged.

If you live in a society where you can proselytize that YOUR dietary choices are morally better than others', then you're privileged.

If you live in a country where you can protest and criticize your government in any non-violent way without fearing reprisals against you, your friends and your family, then you're privileged.

If you live in a country where you can openly express your membership in the LGBTQ+ community without having to worry about being killed and thrown off a roof, then you're privileged.

If you can be a student in an institute of higher learning and can loudly complain about the cultural insensitivity of Halloween costumes worn by your fellow students, then you're privileged.

If you can be a teacher in an institution of higher learning and can present your pseudo-scientific ideologies as legitimate academic research, then you're privileged.

If your definitions of "violence" and "victimization" include terms like micro-aggression and misgendering pronouns, then you're privileged.

If you can buy and get a Che Guevara t-shirt delivered to you from Amazon to show how much you care about social injustice and income inequality, then you're privileged.

If you have a job that pays you at least $34 000 US dollars per year, then you are part of the privileged 1%.

Of course, where we live isn't perfect even if you have most of the things mentioned above.  However, the next time you start complaining about how you want to stop the oppression caused by the privileged in society, take a few seconds to think about who the "privileged oppressors" really are.

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