flatearthpandas
Member
Pointing out privilege has nothing to do with telling someone how they should feel.
Who said it did?
Did you even read that exchange? There were only five sentences.
Pointing out privilege has nothing to do with telling someone how they should feel.
Is there literally anywhere I can go as a white male without being concerned about privilege?
I'm genuinely curious.
Anyone interested in me going out with a bang? I have a very substantiative response typed up, but I don't know if it's worth the accusations I'll get.
Really, though... articles like this are sickening. I can't deny that there are certain privileges afforded to me, but the grass is always greener on the other side.
A right is something that is enforced by law, and therefore something that is enforced by the threat of violence.I don't think you understand what I'm getting at. Being able to play a game without harassment shouldn't be a privilege, it's a right, and one everyone should have. Not sure where you're going with that thought crime remark.
Working to understand privilege and oppression is pretty much necessary to treating people with respect. You don't need to know the jargon (privilege, oppression, cisgender, ableism, etc.), though knowing it doesn't hurt. You just need to have basic empathy. Empathy is understanding what other people go through. It's understanding, for example, that people of color face racism, and that white people perpetuate and gain from it. With that understanding, you can then think more deeply about your interactions, and be better equipped to treat people respectfully.
understanding privilege / power --> empathy --> "treating everyone with respect"
It's less about anonymity and more about not being in immediate risk of a punch in the face.
You're wrong. It already got better with just this:Wow, that list was heartbreaking to read. I've been in so many of those situations listed and I'm only realizing now how stupid and wrong that is. It just became "normal" to me... :/.
I disagree with a few points and some could be applied to both genders, but most of them are spot-on. Damn.
Here's hoping things will get better, but as long as internet anonymity exists, I'm afraid it won't.
See? You became more aware thanks to this article. No doubt others have, too. So it's already doing a decent job.Wow, that list was heartbreaking to read. I've been in so many of those situations listed and I'm only realizing now how stupid and wrong that is. It just became "normal" to me... :/.
We live in a post-Anita world, yo!Since Anita...?
It appears you failed to note the "because of gender" part, which is the salient point. Also, that's just you admitting to your shitty (or stupid, pick one) behaviour."I will never be asked to "prove my gaming cred" simply because of my gender."
Bullshit. I question the cred of a lot of people until they've told me they like Q3A, Dota, or Fighting Games.
lol, no. Speak for yourself.Everyone does this to everyone.
Was it because he was a guy? Did you per chance gloss over the "because of gender" again?"I can publicly post my username, gamertag or contact information online without having to fear being stalked or sexually harassed because of my gender."
My friend Kudochop was heavily stalked and harassed. He's a streamer with only 100 or so viewers at a time.
Don't even what? This happens all the time."I can be sure that my gaming performance (good or bad) wont be attributed to or reflect on my gender as a whole."
I don't even.
You're just supposed to be aware that when someone who is less privileged complains about something pertaining to their lack of privilege, they aren't just making it up for attention and that some people have to think about things and face challenges that more privileged people don't.
A right is something that is enforced by law, and therefore something that is enforced by the threat of violence.
To have the right to not be prejudged would be the basis for thought crimes.
noun
noun: right; plural noun: rights; noun: the right; noun: Right; noun: the Right
1.
that which is morally correct, just, or honorable.
"she doesn't understand the difference between right and wrong"
synonyms: goodness, righteousness, virtue, integrity, rectitude, propriety, morality, truth, honesty, honor, justice, fairness, equity; More
lawfulness, legality
"the difference between right and wrong"
antonyms: wrong
2.
a moral or legal entitlement to have or obtain something or to act in a certain way.
"she had every right to be angry"
synonyms: entitlement, prerogative, privilege, advantage, due, birthright, liberty, authority, power, license, permission, dispensation, leave, sanction, freedom; More
I agree with this article completely.
"Gaming doesn't have an equality problem!" insist straight, white males all over the internet.
Rather than people only reading certain posts and getting mis-information and mis-interpretations from exchanges, let's summarize something that we should all, hopefully agree with:
Sexism is a real thing that affects countless women, especially in the gaming sphere. Despite how we might see how this should or shouldn't be solved, or how the author uses weird terminology, it certainly is a dire problem that affects many women and needs to be fixed in our (gaming) communities.
So what privileges am I supposed to be most concerned about?
1. Male privilege
2. White privilege
3. Sexuality privilege
4. Socio-economic privilege
I guess, my point instead of making list wars of the privileges a subset of gamers enjoy, maybe we should promote a "treat everyone with respect" attitude. That would be far more productive and wouldn't put so many people on the defensive.
Guess you never played Uno on Live.I try to avoid showing other players my genitals during online gaming, so I generally don't have these problems.
Then it's just as amorphous as the description.That's only when it's used as part of political vernacular.
I'm using it this way: https://www.google.com/search?q=right&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-USfficial&client=firefox-a&channel=np&source=hp
In this case moral, not legal.
You... really want to bring statistics into it? Look, I don't really want to do this, but if you're going to say "well, yeah, society as a whole is biased towards white dudes..." then say statistics back you up, well, I do feel compelled to link you to this, a compilation of governmental statistics I found a few years ago. Personally, I think it shows a great deal of situations where life is definitely worse for men.
These statistics paint a pretty bad portrait for living in America as a male. Men fare worse in healthcare, education, and courts. But I'm a poor person. Well below the poverty line. My view of life may not match up with the view of someone who lives a life of financial privilege. I'm also disabled, so I know firsthand how the medical profession deprioritizes men, and how society seems less comfortable with disabled men on the whole.
My experience directly contradicts your statements, so... there you go. Have some statistics.
Personally, I think we all have our disadvantages, and the idea of privilege is just people looking at things they don't have and talking about it. Everyone, in some way, is disadvantaged. Too many of us make the mistake of thinking that we have problems, so other people must not.
We all have problems. Keep that in mind. Our goal should be to help everyone overcome their problems, not try to pretend one group has it worse. Everyone's got it bad, 'cept rich people.
Anyone interested in me going out with a bang? I have a very substantiative response typed up, but I don't know if it's worth the accusations I'll get.
Really, though... articles like this are sickening. I can't deny that there are certain privileges afforded to me, but the grass is always greener on the other side.
no its not treating everyone with respect doesn't require you to think or even acknowledge that people of color face racism. you should show all people the same respect regardless of their color, gender, sexuality. I am not going to say "Well he(colored man) has to deal with racism, so I need to do something above what I would a white person". I am going to treat them the same as I would a white person. respect has zero to do with what others go through and has all to do with how you treat others.
I'm not talking about giving more respect to any certain group, I'm talking about weaving your knowledge of privilege and oppression into how you practice respect. Not everyone is the same, and not everyone goes through the same things. You have to recognize difference (whether or not you agree with the social barriers that make "difference") and work to respect all different people.no its not treating everyone with respect doesn't require you to think or even acknowledge that people of color face racism. you should show all people the same respect regardless of their color, gender, sexuality. I am not going to say "Well he(colored man) has to deal with racism, so I need to do something above what I would a white person". I am going to treat them the same as I would a white person. respect has zero to do with what others go through and has all to do with how you treat others.
Is it just a coincidence that a tweet from the OP shows up in the first 30 seconds of this video? That's one hell of a coincidence.
no its not treating everyone with respect doesn't require you to think or even acknowledge that people of color face racism. you should show all people the same respect regardless of their color, gender, sexuality. I am not going to say "Well he(colored man) has to deal with racism, so I need to do something above what I would a white person". I am going to treat them the same as I would a white person. respect has zero to do with what others go through and has all to do with how you treat others.
I'm sorry, but the "I don't see race" angle is bull. It doesn't mean immediately bowing and scraping to everyone who's part of a disadvantaged group, but you cannot ignore the societal factors that perpetuate disadvantage if you actually want things to get better. You absolutely should treat everyone with equal respect, but pretending that pervasive, systematic discrimination is water under the bridge is flat out wrong.
lol, I forgot about that actually.Is it just a coincidence that a tweet from the OP shows up in the first 30 seconds of this video? That's one hell of a coincidence.
1) It's definitely my stupid behavior.It appears you failed to note the "because of gender" part, which is the salient point. Also, that's just you admitting to your shitty (or stupid, pick one) behaviour.
lol, no. Speak for yourself.
Was it because he was a guy? Did you per chance gloss over the "because of gender" again?
Don't even what? This happens all the time.
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What if you already treat people with respect and encourage that behavior in others but are nonetheless lumped in with people who don't simply because of your gender?
Now I have an urge to quote Colbert...I'm sorry, but the "I don't see race" angle is bull.
Good post.The article is fantastic at making clear the distinction between having privilege and making people feel guilty for having it.
I'm a super-privileged white male, and wholly own up to that fact. I was brought up in a family that gave me a lot of advantages, from the very beginning. Not just being male, but having a good public school district, going to a good university, getting a great job, etc.
There was a hell of a lot of work involved along the way, and many of my friends who were just as privileged didn't work as hard, and are thus not doing as well now despite that privilege.
Do I feel guilty about it? Absolutely not. Should anyone else? Absolutely not.
But at least be fully aware that it exists, and stop trying to equate your hardships with everyone else to try to prove you aren't privileged. Especially if you are a white male playing games (or whatever else in your life). Recognizing when you are privileged increases empathy, helps you improve your own life further, and also helps you make sure you don't make the lives of the less-privileged worse.
It also helps ensure that people don't think you're a total dick.
Then it's just as amorphous as the description.
You used the Civil Rights as a comparison, which was a battle over legal situations, such as segregation. You can understand my confusion then.
Without being "concerned" about it? Pretty much anywhere. Part of the privilege is not having to confront these issues.
That interviewer's a patronizing prick.
So privileges are being treated respectfully, the way everybody should be treated? To me, a privilege is playing games, while an intrinsic right is people respecting me for things about me that are out of my control.
A lot of people in this thread are basically railing against the list because they miss the painfully obvious point being made in this comic.
How is this right enforced? By otherwise moral people looking down upon someone who tarnishes this right? If that's the case, then they are already rights.I'm saying the list in the OP should be rights afforded to everyone, not privilege. I haven't said anything super profound besides that.
The Civil Rights Movement was also about attitudes/moral rights towards race, not simply legal rights.
The real racists are the ones that acknowledge racism exists?
The idea behind that is that since you're a man, you don't have to worry about how sexism might affect or harm you on any given day. You don't have to walk down the street and worry about getting harassed cause your skirt is too short, or cause your skirt is too long, or cause you're smiling, or cause you're not smiling, etc. That's not to say that you don't get shit on the street, or that you don't face other forms of oppression. It also doesn't mean that you might not worry about how the women in your life have to deal with sexism. It just means that as a man, you can go about your daily business and reasonably assume you won't be harmed because of your gender.I have the priviledge to ignore sexism? What?
How is it that you're arguing that a small section of women shouldn't be projected as a whole group again? You're doing the same exact thing you're going against, except by using racial and national standards instead of that of sex. If I was a white male I would worry about bettering myself, getting a job, and getting a date just as much. Being white doesn't inherently make you more likely to be rich and have an easy life, there many white people I know are/were poor and live(d) in the projects with, surprise, other races and cultures. Not only that, but they had to live a life that is extremely hard and rigorous on the mind, as anyone living in the projects. In my case, being "white" would be a disadvantage, no? Such projections in general are disgusting..
That's not the point, it goes to show that male suicide does have an equal trade-off of that of women and that such pressures are a major factor that affect quite a large number of men, not just a minority. to say that males have less of a disadvantage in life situations because they are males is just false.
A lot of people in this thread are basically railing against the list because they miss the painfully obvious point being made in this comic.
However the static is misleading. BOTH genders get into situations which lead to them attempting suicide equally but Males are just better at the execution.
I'm not going to bother reading the whole article because I already know it's going to infuriate me. I think when people like him make mountain of insignificant issues like this, it takes away attention from actual problems facing women.
That list isn't a list of privileges, those should be -rights-. In the same vein that the civil rights movement did not call itself the civil privileges movement, I don't think the use of 'privilege' in this context applies very well. Everyone has the right not to be judged or have assumptions made about them based on their gender/sex. That isn't a privilege.
This is really off topic, but there's instances where you need an outside hand to step in to change things.no, a person that gives a person a crutch to an able bodied pseron, is just as bad as the racist. I am not going to give anyone that doesn't need it a crutch. it can cause the person to rely on it and not step out on their own. I am not saying that racisim doesn't exist. i am just saying I am not going to give anyone a pass due to it. or any other circumstance a person had to overcome.
no, a person that gives a person a crutch to an able bodied pseron, is just as bad as the racist. I am not going to give anyone that doesn't need it a crutch. it can cause the person to rely on it and not step out on their own. I am not saying that racisim doesn't exist. i am just saying I am not going to give anyone a pass due to it. or any other circumstance a person had to overcome.
Is it possible that some of those attempted suicides where attention calls on females? Just wondering.
Also, it's kind of a hard debate when it's branching in every direction like stars from the big bang.