"If what someone is saying about white folks and racism doesn't apply to you, then it isn't about you, and there's no reason to make it about you. If you're feeling a driving need to make it about you anyway, ask yourself where that's coming from. If what they're saying really doesn't apply to you, then why are you feeling defensive about it?
Maybe you think you're just standing up against prejudice and generalizations, because you learned during Black History Month back in school that it's wrong to judge people by their skin color. But the thing is, racism isn't a two-way street.
As white people, we have the enormous privilege of not having the actions of other white people held against us in any meaningful way. For example, when a white guy attacks a federal building (or a post office, or a school, or a women's clinic, or a museum, or a theater, or another federal building, or another school), people don't start treating all white guys like terrorists."
FB: If you, like the white author of this post, are able to write an essay like this then the safety pin is real "when you equate generalizations about white people to generalizations about people of color, you're not just asserting your privilege to shape the discourse around racism; you're also demonstrating a staggering lack of empathy. You're acting as if your implicitly limited understanding of racism is more accurate and 'true' than the lived experiences of people who actually face racism every day."
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