Explaining White Privilege By Tim Wise
Explaining White Privilege
(Or, Your Defense Mechanism is Showing)
By Tim Wise
September 18, 2008
Sigh.
I guess I should have expected it, seeing as how
it's nothing new. I write a piece on racism and
white privilege (namely, the recently viral, "This
is Your Nation on White Privilege"), lots of folks
read it, many of them like it, and others e-mail me
in fits of apoplexy, or post scathing critiques on
message boards in which they invite me to die, to
perform various sexual acts upon myself that I feel
confident are impossible, or, best of all, to "go
live in the ghetto," whereupon I will come to
"truly appreciate the animals" for whom I have so
much affection (the phrase they use for me and that
affection, of course, sounds a bit different, and
I'll leave it to your imagination to conjure the
quip yourself).
Though I have no desire to debate the points made
in the original piece, I would like to address some
of the more glaring, and yet reasonable,
misunderstandings that many seem to have about the
subject of white privilege. That many white folks
don't take well to the term is an understatement,
and quite understandable. For those of us in the
dominant group, the notion that we may receive
certain advantages generally not received by others
is a jarring, sometimes maddening concept. And if
we don't understand what the term means, and what
those who use it mean as they deploy it, our
misunderstandings can generate anger and heat,
where really, none is called for. So let me take
this opportunity to explain what I mean by white
privilege.
Of course, the original piece only mentioned
examples of white privilege that were directly
implicated in the current presidential campaign. It
made no claims beyond that. Yet many who wrote to
me took issue with the notion that there was such a
thing, arguing, for instance that there are lots of
poor white people who have no privilege, and many
folks of color who are wealthy, who do. But what
this argument misses is that race and class
privilege are not the same thing.
Though we are used to thinking of privilege as a
mere monetary issue, it is more than that. Yes,
there are rich black and brown folks, but even they
are subject to racial profiling and stereotyping
(especially because those who encounter them often
don't know they're rich and so view them as
decidedly not), as well as bias in mortgage
lending, and unequal treatment in schools. So, for
instance, even the children of well-off black
families are more likely to be suspended or
expelled from school than the children of poor
whites, and this is true despite the fact that
there is no statistically significant difference in
the rates of serious school rule infractions
between white kids or black kids that could justify
the disparity (according to fourteen different
studies examined by Russ Skiba at Indiana University).
As for poor whites, though they certainly are
suffering economically, this doesn't mean they lack
racial privilege. I grew up in a very modest
apartment, and economically was far from
privileged. Yet I received better treatment in
school (placement in advanced track classes even
when I wasn't a good student), better treatment by
law enforcement officers, and indeed more job
opportunities because of connections I was able to
take advantage of, that were pretty much
unavailable to the folks of color I knew growing
up. Likewise, low income whites everywhere are able
to clean up, go to a job interview and be seen as
just another white person, whereas a person of
color, even who isn't low-income, has to wonder
whether or not they might trip some negative
stereotype about their group when they go for an
interview or sit in the classroom answering
questions from the teacher. Oh, and not to put too
fine a point on it, but even low-income whites are
more likely to own their own home than middle
income black families, thanks to past advantages in
housing and asset accumulation, which has allowed
those whites to receive a small piece of property
from their families.
The point is, privilege is as much a psychological
matter as a material one. Whites have the luxury of
not having to worry that our race is going to mark
us negatively when looking for work, going to
school, shopping, looking for a place to live, or
driving for that matter: things that folks of color
can't take for granted.
Let me share an analogy to make the point.
Taking things out of the racial context for a
minute: imagine persons who are able bodied, as
opposed to those with disabilities. If I were to
say that able-bodied persons have certain
advantages, certain privileges if you will, which
disabled persons do not, who would argue the point?
I imagine that no one would. It's too obvious,
right? To be disabled is to face numerous
obstacles. And although many persons with
disabilities overcome those obstacles, this fact
doesn't take away from the fact that they exist.
Likewise, that persons with disabilities can and do
overcome obstacles every day, doesn't deny that
those of us who are able-bodied have an edge. We
have one less thing to think and worry about as we
enter a building, go to a workplace, or just try
and navigate the contours of daily life. The fact
that there are lots of able-bodied people who are
poor, and some disabled folks who are rich, doesn't
alter the general rule: on balance, it pays to be
able-bodied.
That's all I'm saying about white privilege: on
balance, it pays to be a member of the dominant
racial group. It doesn't mean that a white person
will get everything they want in life, or win every
competition, but it does mean that there are
general advantages that we receive.
So, for instance, studies have found that job
applicants with white sounding names are 50% more
likely to receive a call-back for a job interview
than applicants with black-sounding names, even
when all job-related qualifications and credentials
are the same.
Other studies have found that white men with a
criminal record are more likely to get a call-back
for an interview than black male job applicants who
don't have one, even when all requisite
qualifications, demeanor and communication styles
are the same.
Others have found that white women are far more
likely than black women to be hired for work
through temporary agencies, even when the black
women have more experience and are more qualified.
Evidence from housing markets has found that there
are about two million cases of race-based
discrimination against people of color every year
in the United States. That's not just bad for folks
of color; the flipside is that there are, as a
result, millions more places I can live as a white
person.
Or consider criminal justice. Although data from
the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration indicates that whites are equally or
more likely than blacks or Latinos to use drugs, it
is people of color (blacks and Latinos mostly) who
comprise about 90 percent of the persons
incarcerated for a drug possession offense. Despite
the fact that white men are more likely to be
caught with drugs in our car (on those occasions
when we are searched), black men remain about four
times more likely than white men to be searched in
the first place, according to Justice Department
findings. That's privilege for the dominant group.
That's the point: privilege is the flipside of
discrimination. If people of color face
discrimination, in housing, employment and
elsewhere, then the rest of us are receiving a de
facto subsidy, a privilege, and an advantage in
those realms of daily life. There can be no down
without an up, in other words.
None of this means that white folks don't face
challenges. Of course we do, and some of them
(based on class, gender, sexual orientation,
disability status, or other factors) are systemic
and institutionalized. But on balance, we can take
for granted that we will receive a leg-up on those
persons of color with whom we share a nation.
And no, affirmative action doesn't change any of this.
Despite white fears to the contrary, even with
affirmative action in place (which, contrary to
popular belief does not allow quotas or formal
set-asides except in those rare cases where blatant
discrimination has been proven) whites hold about
ninety percent of all the management level jobs in
this country, receive about ninety-four percent of
government contract dollars, and hold ninety
percent of tenured faculty positions on college
campuses. And in spite of affirmative action
programs, whites are more likely than members of
any other racial group to be admitted to their
college of first choice.* And according to a study
released last year, for every student of color who
received even the slightest consideration from an
affirmative action program in college, there are
two whites who failed to meet normal qualification
requirements at the same school, but who got in
anyway because of parental influence, alumni status
or because other favors were done.
Furthermore, although white students often think
that so-called minority scholarships are a
substantial drain on financial aid resources that
would otherwise be available to them, nothing could
be further from the truth. According to a national
study by the General Accounting Office, less than
four percent of scholarship money in the U.S. is
represented by awards that consider race as a
factor at all, while only 0.25 percent (that's one
quarter of one percent for the math challenged) of
all undergrad scholarship dollars come from awards
that are restricted to persons of color alone.
What's more, the idea that large numbers of
students of color receive the benefits of
race-based scholarships is lunacy of the highest
order. In truth, only 3.5 percent of college
students of color receive any scholarship even
partly based on race, suggesting that such programs
remain a pathetically small piece of the financial
aid picture in this country, irrespective of what a
gaggle of reactionary white folks might believe.**
In other words, despite the notion that somehow we
have attained an equal opportunity, or color-blind
society, the fact is, we are far from an equitable
nation. People of color continue to face obstacles
based solely on color, and whites continue to reap
benefits from the same. None of this makes whites
bad people, and none of it means we should feel
guilty or beat ourselves up. But it does mean we
need to figure out how we're going to be
accountable for our unearned advantages. One way is
by fighting for a society in which those privileges
will no longer exist, and in which we will be able
to stand on our own two feet, without the
artificial crutch of racial advantage to prop us
up. We need to commit to fighting for racial equity
and challenging injustice at every turn, not only
because it harms others, but because it diminishes
us as well (even as it pays dividends), and because
it squanders the promise of fairness and equity to
which we claim to adhere as Americans.
It's about responsibility, not guilt. And if one
can't see the difference between those two things,
there is little that this or any other article can
probably do. Perhaps starting with a dictionary
would be better.
*U.S Federal Glass Ceiling Commission, Good for
Business: Making Full Use of the Nation's Human
Capital. (Washington DC: Bureau of National
Affairs, March 1995); Fred L. Pincus, Reverse
Discrimination: Dismantling the Myth. (Boulder:
Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2003), 18; Roberta J.
Hill, "Far More Than Frybread," in Race in the
College Classroom: Pedagogy and Politics, ed.
Bonnie TuSmith and Maureen T. Reddy. (New
Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press), 169;
Sylvia Hurtado and Christine Navia, "Reconciling
College Access and the Affirmative Action Debate,"
in Affirmative Action's Testament of Hope, ed.
Mildred Garcia (Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 1997), 115.
**U.S. General Accounting Office, 1994.
"Information on Minority Targeted Scholarships,"
B251634. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing
Office, January; Stephen L. Carter, "Color-Blind
and Color-Active," 1992. The Recorder. January 3.
Posted 11:31
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