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Granted & Grasping Privilege

Every once in a while social media delivers some succinct explanation of a complex issue that speaks to reason and justice in a rational and calm context. Here’s that find for me in the last few weeks – wish I knew who wrote it:

In case it’s still unclear… 400 years ago white men enslaved black people. And sold them. And treated them as less than human. For 250 years. While white men created the country’s laws and its systems of government. While 10 to 15 generations of white families got to grow and flourish and make choices that could make their lives better.

And then 150 years ago white men “freed” black people from slavery. But then angry white men created laws that made it impossible for them to vote. Or to own land. Or to have the same rights as white people. And even erected monuments glorifying people who actively had fought to keep them enslaved. All while another 5 to 10 generations of white families got to grow and accumulate wealth and gain land and get an education.

And then 60 years ago white people made it “legal” for black people to vote, and to be “free” from discrimination. But angry white people still fought to keep schools segregated. And closed off neighborhoods to white people only. And made it harder for black people to get bank loans, or get quality education or health care, or to (gasp) marry a white person. All while another 2 to 3 generations of white families got to grow and pass their wealth down to their children and their children’s children.

And then we entered an age where we had the technology to make public the things that were already happening in private – the beatings, the stop and frisk laws, the unequal distribution of justice, the police brutality (in the south, police began as slave patrols designed to catch runaway slaves). And only now, after 400+ years and 20+ generations of a white head start, are we starting to truly have a dialogue about what it means to be black.

White privilege doesn’t mean you haven’t suffered or fought or worked hard. It doesn’t mean white people are responsible for the sins of our ancestors. It doesn’t mean you can’t be proud of who you are.

It does mean that we need to acknowledge that the system our ancestors created is built for white people.

It does mean that Black people are at a disadvantage because of the color of their skin, and

It does mean that we owe it to our neighbors– of all colors– to acknowledge that and work to make our world more equitable.

#BlackLivesMatter

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