Claims of “White Privilege”
My title is taken from the article below which has a longer
title: “Felicity Huffman’s two-week jail sentence triggers claims of
“white privilege.” I just cut a little piece out for my title.
You see, my eyes bugged out at the word, “claim.”
Being not afraid to call a spade a spade, I’m going to say that is white
privilege thrown directly in your face. This is an overt example of privilege
mashed and gooey all over your newsfeed. All over the internet, this fraud is
being compared to minor crimes resulting in years of punishment for women of
color.
She paid thousands of dollars in bribes to inflate her
daughter’s SAT scores. That’s right and when someone gets a coveted slot at a major
university, someone else doesn’t.
We’re supposed to live in a meritocracy. This often seems
comedic given the incredible effects of money and birth but the idea of a fair
playing field keeps the lower classes in check and makes the remnants of our
democratic system more palatable.
One of the elements of our enduring meritocracy are
standardized tests. These keep the unworthy out of the good schools. Of course,
the unworthy strangely enough come almost entirely from the lower classes.
Having a stimulating home environment with two parents, more and more an upper middle-class
phenomenon as salaries have collapsed over the last forty years, is a critical
factor in later success. Two working parents barely able to make ends meet or
not quite making it creates a stressful upbringing without the benefits of
summer camps and special classes for the young.
But they believe.
Many of these parents encourage their children to read, to
study – to work hard. They read countless books, buy test prep books by the
dozens and take college courses while still in high school. And sometimes,
their children get into a good school.
But the upper classes do not believe in merit. They believe
in money and connections. For in the real world, we all know that who you were
born to and who you know are the major elements of success. And the treadmill
of study and test prep is just a diversion to keep the masses in check with the
idea that there is some element of fairness.
So, when the children of the privileged are mediocre and
incompetent, it is simply of money and the right people to call. Underachievers
suddenly find themselves long term participants in sports. Special test
sessions can be arranged and most commonly and most easily large sums are
donated to the appropriate schools. The spreadsheets of the parental donations
are carefully examined by the admitting bodies of many significant schools.
This is called corruption and along with legacy admissions
and other treats for the already wealthy diminishes opportunity and stultifies
real talent. The destruction of the best chances of the tens of thousands of
the poor but talented is the great crime here. For in our society, it has been
decreed that the old payola beats talent every time.
Wait, you say, you saw on the web some minority child gets
admitted to a half dozen ivy league schools and, of course, that means the
system is fair. Back in the 19th century, hucksters would sell
sealed bars of soap on the street for a dollar each. A plant in the crowd would
produce a ten dollar bill or a twenty or whatever amount was best considering
crowd size – and the suckers would line up. Now, obviously this child is real
and is actually going to one of the schools, but it is the exception that
proves the rule. And when I read about these children, the sacrifices they made
and the often incredible work they did, I have to wonder how much of a childhood
did they have.
I think their sacrifices to play this awful rigged game show
just awful it is.
This is America, the land of opportunity. Every child should
have a fair chance at a good school and not be shunted into second choices
based on accident of birth and an unfair game they can’t win save in rarest of
circumstances.
James Alan Pilant Felicity
Huffman’s two-week jail sentence triggers claims of ‘white privilege’
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