Politesse
Lux Aeterna
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2018
- Messages
- 16,549
- Location
- Tauhalamme/Laquisimas
- Gender
- nonbinary
- Basic Beliefs
- Jedi Wayseeker
I totally understand the concept of privilege as it's being used, but I also understand how the word itself has caused a lot of misunderstandings, due to that word's more traditional meaning. I think it would have been better to simply point out that there are a lot of people who aren't being given the basic human rights that we all should be entitled to in a free society, instead of equating those rights as some type of a privilege.
If only a small minority has a certain advantage, though, is it really a basic human right in a meaningful sense? I see how social elites are comforted emotionally by the idea that the privileges they've been granted are or should be equally accessible to everyone, but it simply isn't so. If there are more exceptions to the rule than recognitions of the rule -- if you can walk into any corporate boardroom in this country and make an incredibly accurate guess as to what sort of a demographic group you'll find inside, or any prison - is it really a rule for all, or just for some? It seems to me that if everyone actually had all those rights, we probably wouldn't have ever called them privileges. Privilege as compared to what? But those privileges aren't fairly distributed to everyone, and never have been. I really appreciate the OP and think it is very accurate in its social description of how privilege works in practice. But I don't know if I entirely agree with the semantic claim. From a broader historical perspective, a lot of these "privileges" are essentially spoils of war, the direct product of injustices that were never addressed or accounted for. To the extent that women, Blacks, rural white farmers, and gays have begun to claim some of those privileges some of the time was the result of direct, concerted political activism on their part, a project requiring several centuries of hard labor and sacrifices, and whose goals are yet incomplete. No one "granted" these rights to our society's untouchables, they've had to claim those privileges with their own hands and against fierce resistance every step of the way.