Captain LeBubbles wrote:Zanosuke Kurosaki wrote:*We used to be upper-lower-middle class, but my mother retired from the military as I got out of high school, so we lost that hyphen around said time. And no one will get that joke...
I get it! We fluctuated between middle and lower middle class for most of my childhood, so I totally get that.
Scalzi had an awesome metaphor for privilege: http://whatever.scalzi.com/2012/05/15/s ... -there-is/
Otaking wrote:Scalzi had an awesome metaphor for privilege: http://whatever.scalzi.com/2012/05/15/s ... -there-is/
Man,
I love Scalzi's books but if there's one thing I hate more than white people it's white people trying to condescend to feel better about themselves by waving collective guilt around.
I want to learn to Dougie. Difficulty: Inferno

Muttley wrote:Otaking, I didn't get any feeling that John Scalzi was "waving his collective guilt around", more that he was demonstrating a soundbite for the hard-of-thinking SWM readers to get the point across.
Lia S wrote:Valerie is right.
As usual.
TCampbell wrote:Val has a harem, but it's chiefly structured online at the moment.
Muttley wrote:Otaking, I didn't get any feeling that John Scalzi was "waving his collective guilt around", more that he was demonstrating a soundbite for the hard-of-thinking SWM readers to get the point across.
This. He was saying, "Oh, you think that word I'm using is the problem? Well then here's the exact same concept written out plainly for you without that word."
Lia S wrote:Valerie is right.
As usual.
TCampbell wrote:Val has a harem, but it's chiefly structured online at the moment.
Did... you even read the article? He mentions that someone who is not straight, white and male can have advantages that some/most straight, white males don't have. He referred to them as "stats." They were things like charisma, wealth, intelligence, etc. At no point, anywhere in that article, did he ever imply that white people or men or straight people should hate themselves. He's just trying to explain in clear terms that some types of people have it easier than some other types of people in some particular fields.
He didn't say "you are bad and should feel bad." He said, "There's a decent possibility that group X has an easier life than group Y, and I would like group X to understand that."
Kilroy says:
May 15, 2012 at 1:24 pm
I’ll admit that my viewpoint is somewhat skewed from my perspective as a lawyer, which is probably a field where diversity and affirmative action make a much larger difference than in other areas. But black female from a wealthy family with a 168 LSAT and 3.8 GPA is going to get admitted to Harvard for law school. White male from a wealthy family with exact same stats and other experience points (clubs, extracurriculara, etc.) is not going to get into Harvard, but will be pushed down probably out of the critical top 14 law schools. Upon graduation in middle of her class at Harvard, black female from wealthy family will get interviews and easily land a position with one of the top big firms that find it very difficult to full the necessary diversity positions and are lucky to find a double minority. She then starts at $160,000 per year and is pretty much guaranteed Partner in 8 years. Straight White male from wealthy family graduates top 1/3 of his lower level law school, gets hired by a Big Firm in a small city making $130,000 per year and has about a 1/20 chance of making partner or being squeezed out in 3 years.
As far as the straight black male from Chicago ghetto compared to the straight white male from the Mississippi trailer park, you just hear a lot more stories of that occasional success story, usually through athletics at least to get a foot in the door at a university, compared to the white male. Off hand, can’t think of any success stories that start in a trailer park in Mississippi.

Valerie wrote:Trefle, may I ask what country you live in?
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