Saturday, October 12, 2013

White Privilege: Why Can't We See It?

"Recently in deep reflection I learned something about myself. I noticed that when I would watch the news, and see a different race other than my own, I would group that person into their specific race group. I would associate the traits of that individual to the whole race. At the moment I thought about how when I see a white person convicted of a horrible crime I think, “that guy is sick” not “white people are sick”. After realizing this I was disgusted and started to question myself."

That is a recent quote for a paper that I had written for school. At that time I had just come to the realization that I perceive many people unjustly. My own white privilege was blinding me. Since then I have analyzed the statement and noticed something very interesting. Note that I said, "I was disgusted and started to question myself". I think that to question ones self is a wonderful process that helps breed deeper thought, but I did not take into account the systems that led me to have this biased view. I was taking this global issue and turning it into my own personal problem. The truth is that this is happening everywhere and all of the time. We all bring experiences and perspectives into our daily interactions but how do they affect us? The video below addresses this.

Our Own Lens- Tim Wise

Tim Wise is an expert in his field and his work on white privilege has helped me immensely gain key perspectives in relation to white privilege.  When he says, "...if you're not interrogating your lens and how you see the world or how you see your community or how you see your college environment it's very easy to end up perpetuating the marginalization of other people even when you have all the best intentions". If we do not deconstruct why we have our current perspectives (or lenses) we are going to indefinitely keep this racial bias alive even if we do not intend to. "It has absolutely nothing to do in the modern era with your intent...good people can perpetuate bad systems and we do it every day".

How can we prevent this? A majority of the time people are not intending to cause harm or do not realize that what they are saying or doing is wrong. If we can not notice the problem how can we fix it? Take a look at another clip from Tim Wise below.

Train Yourself

We are raised in a culture that makes us unaware of social injustices, oppression, and even the concept that systems do affect our views. We are led to believe that everything should be the way it is, based upon normalcy. That we, the dominant group, are not to blame. We need to take the social structures we have and closely examine and question them. If we fail to recognize our problems, we will ultimately fail to start making strides to correct them. Our ignorance tends to be a large contributor to our blindness. People who tell themselves that racism and white privilege are diminishing are the same folks who do not examine the systems that put the oppression there in the first place. They are simply accepting the systems that put white privilege in place and looking the other way.

Occasionally I will hear white people make ignorant comments about slavery and black people in general. I have heard on multiple occasions that, "slavery happened a long time ago, it does not affect people today" which is absolutely incorrect. Also I tend to hear a lot of people follow a racist comment with an exclamation of, "I have black friends...I am not racist". The video below talks about each of these comments and demonstrates just how ignorant they are.

I am Not Racist...

"Even if we have people of color in our lives, that would be like a straight man saying that he can't be sexist because he has a wife...just because you have people who are close to you in a marginalized group, doesn't mean that you don't carry any prejudice in the larger society."

Throughout this post systems are talked about and the videos mentioned a few of them, but what systems do you think play the most vital roles? Why is that? Did you disagree with any of the points that Tim Wise was making (if so explain your perspective)? Did you look at the issue of white privilege any differently after reading/watching this?