Privilege By George Johnson Analysis

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Johnson states in this chapter that people try to get themselves off the hook and the easiest way to get off the hook is to deny that it exists in the first place. I would disagree with his statement, I would tend to believe that people, including myself, know that this exists, they just do not understand. It is also possible to recognize an issue and not agree with it, disagreement does not equate to denial.
So I am back to the trying to understand the true meaning of “privilege”, I seem to get confused as we go, so I found this article that explained it in a different way than Johnson. As I read the chapter I was beginning to get confused by Johnson’s comments and at first thought I really disagree with him, and he is just way to extreme. Although after reading another article, I did agree with the way they defined privilege. I see it as ignorance not denial, which I have thought all along. I believe we are all ignorant, or maybe a more polite way to say it would be that we are all “uneducated” in many of the areas that are not our everyday grind. Again, I do not believe that being uneducated in a certain area equates to denial.
I go back to myself, dealing with my clients on a daily basis; some of the things they say
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The phrase "check your privilege" is typically invoked when someone is being woefully ignorant or insensitively dismissive of the oppression of minority groups. It's not because someone wants a white person to apologize for being white, or dismiss someone's opinion based on race. It's a way of reminding someone that they may not know or understand what they are talking about. It's a gentler way of saying, "You are kind of being a self-absorbed asshole and you should maybe learn more about the minority experience before you continue talking." And based on Tal's essay... yeah. I can see where he might have heard this phrase before. But here's how a privilege check usually