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by donretag
1167 days ago
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That was pretty much my experience. Immigrant family and since I went to high school in Europe, I did not have much of a choice for university and ended up at CUNY. Worked evening in supermarkets for the first couple of years, then I was able to get an internship due to my grades, but basically installing computers, not development. There were not many internships available. Eventually went to a top engineering uni for grad school. Despite all of this, I am still considered privileged and white. When you have no circle, no network, no money, when no one in your family went to college, everything is more difficult. |
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Now imagine being a Black person with no circle, no network, no money, no one in your family having gone to college. Everything identical for your skin color. Statistically, the hypothetical black person is likely to have worse outcomes than the hypothetical equivalent white person. This is what white privilege is.
It is possible that you benefitted from white privilege, despite all of the hardships you faced.
You can pretend all day that white privilege doesn't exist, but that's just not what is observed.