Thursday, September 27, 2012

post week 4


In the cartoon “White Lies a ‘Top Ten’ List,” characters are depicted as white people justifying their reason for racism.  This animation lists 10 things white people say in order to avoid being seen as a racist.  Some of these listing go as such; “whites are the only group left that it’s still ok to criticize,” “we’re liberals, so we can’t be racist,” and my favorite “to be fair, we should be talking about racism against whites, too.”  This makes it clear to the reader that the white population is trying to justify their reason to be a racist.  Going back to the census and having some people identify as white to avoid such harsh discrimination, we can come to the conclusion that white is a standard and that people of color are subject to discrimination/racism.  The connection to white privilege is that people of color are automatically considered less than whites, therefore making it more difficult to achieve privileges that white people have easy accessibility to. 

                I fully agree with the McIntosh quote.  We do try to mask this realization of racism in order to keep things the way they are, by having whites and males on top of the privileged latter.  I can make another reference to our past to present presidents of the United States. Before we had Barak Obama as our president and role model, we had white male presidents setting a standard that, to be white and a man means you will have all the power.  To this day we are trying to preserve this idea, by limiting the power and privileges that people of color have.  By having Obama as a president we are finally taking a peek under the mask in order to diminish discrimination/racism against people of color.   

                In John Scalzi’s post, the video game analogy, a way to explain how privileges work to white males without upsetting them, makes it useful for us to understand structural privilege.  He goes into how if we where to put ourselves into a video game, some of us would be able to start on the easy difficulty and others with less privileges can only start at a medium or hard difficulty.  In this case the white males are the ones who have the option of starting on an easy difficulty, whereas to people of color have only medium or hard as an option for difficulty.  Word count:402

 

Friday, September 21, 2012

pre reading weeek 4


To be privileged to me is to inherit a certain social status or to be offered certain opportunities that most people don’t have access to.  According to the dictionary, a privilege is “a special right, advantage, or immunity granted or available only to one person or group of people.”  A few examples of privileges that different people in society can posses include citizenship, lack of discrimination, and a sense of hierarchy in society.  With many immigrants coming to America searching for the American dream, being born in the United States and automatically becoming an American citizen is a privilege to their eyes.  Having a voice in society by voting and having health care and being able to have civil rights is a privilege that us U.S. citizens have.  A sense of belonging with equality to other people and equal opportunity is what people immigrate to the United States for; unfortunately that isn’t the case due to racial hierarchy.  This creates racism.  We have this idea that “white” people are on top of the racial hierarchy.  This notion dates back to when the first draft of the census came about.  During this time, white people, or to be more specific, white males, had all the power.  With slavery being a reality, there was a racial structure created; where white people where above every other race due to privileges placed upon them.  Having these privileges, white people had more availability to resources and wealth, which in hand enabled them to have African-American slaves to work beneath them.   By setting this kind of idea that people of color are not meant to be equals with whites, mankind continues to make a sort of pyramid that puts whites on top.   Having these types of thoughts can lead to racism.  Racism is when one person has a bad view on another person of a certain race.  As I write this I’m thinking to myself, how can anyone be racist against Mexicans, Cubans, or Salvadorians if they aren’t considered a race by the government.  This just goes to show how blurring the line between ethnicity and race on the census can be beneficial in the sense that everyone would be able to identify as whatever they choose to say and being accepted for it, instead as being seen as a lower class citizen for the color of your skin.  This sense of white people having more privileges than any person of color is true.  It took hundreds of years for America to elect a black president.  Racism goes hand in hand with how different races/ethnicities come with different privileges. 
word count:433

Saturday, September 15, 2012

week 3 pre-reading


Living in the USA, we experience a vast mixture of races and ethnicities in our everyday lives.  Take San Francisco State University for example, we have a broad range of students attending our school from all over the world and with unique backgrounds.  I believe a major ethnicity in the United States would come from our neighbors down south, the Hispanics.  With constant immigration from Central America to Northern America, in hopes to live a better life, anywhere you travel to, there will be a large group of Hispanics in the community.  Before taking this class, I would’ve easily have said Caucasian was the majority of ethnicities in America, but I consider them the largest race in America.  To be white in this country is to be at the top of the pyramid.  I have come to understand that a lot of people identify as white in order to break their own molds and fit into society easier.  I’m referring mainly to immigrants who find it struggling to transition into the states due to racial profiling and discrimination.  I believe the census itself is a form of discrimination.  Not including Mexican as a race is basically saying, “You’re not what we tolerate in this country.”  As I fill out the census form for myself I am upset that I have to write down the race that I identify as, especially since there are so many Mexican-Americans in this country.  Another thing I found strange was how many different type of Asians are listed under the race section.  As if being a certain type of Asian is better than being Indian or Persian.  With this in mind I do believe the census has a heavy influence on racial and ethnic categorization in our everyday lives.  Unfortunately it’s not an accurate or positive influence.  If I were to “re-do” the census, I would have it done electronically and broken down into sub-groups.  For example: for race, I would have basic categories, such as; Asian, Hispanic, white, African, etc. and from what you check off, it would lead you to another link that would give specific racial identification options.  Such as, if you were to check off Hispanic/Latino, it would lead you to a link that would specify whether you identify as Mexican, Cuban, Colombian, Chilean etc.  I feel as though that would make things more progressive and accurate in how the census would create a forward moving influence on racial and ethnic views in the United States.

word count: 415