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Elise Gabriel

Elise Gabriel, senior.
Elise Gabriel, senior.

What does white privilege mean to you?

“To me, white privilege describes the daily safety and security, the freedom from discrimination and micro-aggressions, that is so customary to my life that it is hard to even see. It is the fact that, from before I was even born, I had better prospects for my life than many people will ever have. Beyond living with less fear, with more advantages, and so on, white privilege is living without commentary on my race, without the worry of how I represent my race to the world. The greatest power lives in invisibility, in perceived solidarity. When a person of color commits a crime, it is construed as a representation of their entire race. When a white person commits a crime, the culpability is solely their own. We are so quick to accuse all Muslims of terrorism thanks to the actions of only a few, yet we do not think for a minute that the Westboro Bapstist Church represents all Christians by any means. It is a very dangerous lie to believe that white people do not have a race or a cultural identity, and there is so much dangerous power in this invisibility when it comes to race. The average white person’s actions and perspectives are perceived as unbiased, despite the fact that they are extremely biased because we live without ever having to see the discrimination that people of color live with. And because we are perceived as unbiased, it is far too easy to invalidate the lived experiences of non-white people as a “neutral party.” White privilege is the fact that, if I need a band-aid, I can find one that matches my skin. And because I have white privilege, I never even noticed this until someone else pointed it out to me. One of the most dangerous parts of white privilege is the privilege of not knowing that you have it.”