Oh, is it obvious? Is this an acceptable argument?
When white people start telling me how better off they are by nature of their skin color I become immediately suspicious. So be my guest, argue how some people, by virtue of their skin color, are better off than others. — NOS4A2
I don't need to argue that, because that's not the argument. The argument is that some people are better off by virtue of having been in power in the past.
But I do think too many people assume that equality of opportunity can somehow be established without ever looking at outcomes, past or present. — Echarmion
ability has a normal (gaussian) distribution as most statistics about human characteristics seem to, then if opportunity had a uniform (equal) distribution, — Pfhorrest
The reaction is understandable, but slavery does have a very real and direct effect on the wealth of the descendants of those slaves today. — Echarmion
As superflous as any descriptor. "White privilege" is "white" because, historically, white people were indeed better off because of their skin color.
Distribution of various kinds of ability is measured in many varied scientific studies, straightforwardly. — Pfhorrest
I thought it was power that made them privileged. — NOS4A2
That seems like it would be almost impossible to establish. There are so many variables at play, and we'd be trying to connect current data with a situation that ended 150 years ago. — Terrapin Station
The situation didn't end 150 years ago (if we are talking about the US). It ended perhaps 60 years ago, at best. — Echarmion
There weren't slaves in the US 60 years ago.
The claim was that it's connected to slavery. — Terrapin Station
Privilege is bestowed, given. There certainly are people who would privilege others because of skin color, and they should be called out for doing so, but the receiver cannot be blamed for being a part of the privilege transaction unless he is aware of it and is in agreement with it. He is not a participant in white privilege, willingly or otherwise. Neither is he born with privilege. — NOS4A2
You're taking the claim unreasonably literally. — Echarmion
For one, racial segregation was an outgrowth of slavery, the next best thing when slavery was no longer possible. For another, to assess the impact of slavery on the current state of affairs, we still need to look at what happened after the emancipation. And it turns out the former slaves were not allowed an even footing even then. — Echarmion
I didn't say white people are somehow universally to blame for there being white privilege.
In my view, when we're doing philosophy, we need to make literal claims, especially if it's something that's supposed to be important, supposed to have a lot of significance. So what would the literal claim be? — Terrapin Station
That sounds like you're talking about something historical primarily. If we're trying to connect something about slavery to something about conditions at present, I think it's going to be more or less impossible. — Terrapin Station
Would you say white people universally have white privilege? — NOS4A2
No, I wouldn't say that. It seems evident that there are white people that are not priviledged, at least not in any significant way.
That it's connected to slavery . . . — Echarmion
You think it's impossible to establish a causal connection between past and present? — Echarmion
If that's the literal claim then how was I taking it "unreasonably literally"? — Terrapin Station
When we're talking about something with so many variables and a 150+ year separation, yes. — Terrapin Station
Maybe i’m Understanding it wrong. I always thought white privilege was the unearned privilege afforded to white people in general. — NOS4A2
By ignoring what happened after slavery ended — Echarmion
. For one, racial segregation was an outgrowth of slavery, — Echarmion
Because it tries to blame Southern post war racism on Reconstruction, as if the slave states weren't blatantly racist prior to the war, considering they openly treated human beings as chattel. Jim Crow was child's play compared to the laws allowing slavery. — Hanover
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