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All) The Invisible knapsack of white privilege concept is the fact that all people are still treated differently based on the color of their skin except for whites. Racism today is not always the same as racism in the past. Horrific incidents of overt racism still occur and hate groups still exist, but the racism of today is much more subtle than the past. As Martin Luther King, Jr. once said, "The absence of brutality and unregenerate evil is not the presence of justice." The racism that exists today quietly benefits and privileges whites in terms of what they receive from systems and society. For example I was in line at a bar and there was a group of black men and they all where carded, but as soon as we got to the front of the line my group was not at all carded and the thing that is messed up the most about it is that we had ten people and there was only three of them. So that means the privilege of the situation was that we were ten white Caucasian males and they were not. They where three black males. Therefore we got in to the bar with no trouble at all. I think I would have never seen that as a privilege until I have took this class. Now that I look back on it I see what a white privilege it was to have not been carded.

2.

1) Money and Higher Education

2, 3, 4 and 5) One of the main privileges is Higher education. It may be optional, but to enter a respectable career, one must continue their education in order to achieve his financial and/or personal goals. Teenagers who attend college use their extended schooling to further obtain knowledge. The primary objective of higher education is to enhance one’s abilities for his future. A student can learn from school in numerous ways, but liberal education is not a way to ...

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...efore, the only people that would systematically benefit from racism are Whites. Tatum calls this White privilege. I have never looked at it as a privilege. Everyone can be prejudice, but only the dominant race can be racist. Although this is hard to hear, being a White college student, I have always prided myself on a subsistence that is free from bigotry; I realize that Tatum is right though from reading this chapter.

Not only is racism restricted to Whites, but it is an integral part of the lives of most Whites. Tatum argues that many Whites are passively racist. This means that even though they are not openly racist, Whites have more of an access to the societal institutions that are in need of change and thus a responsibility to reject such institutions until changes are made. She describes being passively racist as the equivalent to standing still.

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