Unearned Race Advantage


I believe life is governed by chance. Chances differ from race, religion, gender, family, economics. genetics and health. We are given these differences at birth. Some are permanent, while others have the ability to be changed. Some change their religion, some change their gender. Changes can be made to alter our body image that comes with inherited genes. We also can change the social economic structure we were born into, but that also comes with a lot of challenges. And with modern medicine, we even have the ability to change our health if we were unfortunate to have been passed on a cancer cell through our genetic inheritance, which I was able to personally change. But our race we were born into is not one that we can change.
I see life, as we begin, like a large casino game of roulette, a big game of chance. You are not sure exactly where that little ball will land. Each small pocket has very different categories that make up who we are brought into this world as. Some have better odds than others. And after the dealer spins that wheel and then puts down the marble maker on the space where the ball landed, we are who we are. Oddly enough the color of that ball that determines who we are is white.
When my time came to play, that little ball landed in the pocket that must have been labeled “Unearned Race Advantage”. Born as a white male into a middle to upper-class family in the suburbs of Northern New Jersey came with many advantages. But I have always appreciated the advantages I have been given, humble enough to know I am not better than anyone and wise enough to know that I am different from many. But being both humble and wise enough still does not make me fully understand the struggles, discrimination and prejudices that differences & race plays. Though I feel compassion and empathy, feel the injustice and can support the fight for equality, I am still at an advantage in this world, not only being white, but a male as well.
The advantages of a white male that I get from society becomes louder and louder as I open my eyes and mind more. I notice a lot of times that my world is easier and situations are often taken for granted by many of my race and gender. If I cut my finger, it is easy for me to find a band aid that is the color of my skin. When I bought my home, in a neighborhood I wanted to live in and could afford, I expected my neighbors would accept me and be kind to me. When I walk down the street, and I hear the clicking of the door locking of someone still in their car, I don’t question it is for their safety. If I have an issue at a store and need to address it with a manager, someone of my color ( and usually male) will be the one I talk to. Buying a greeting card at a card shop is easy for me to find one that has people on the card that look like me. If I go to the movies, chances are I will see most of the people in the movie who are my race and color. It is not a problem for me to walk into any barber shop and feel like the person their knows how to cut my hair. If I get pulled over by the police, most of the time the officer will look like me and I have a fair chance to be heard without discrimination.
I completely appreciate what I have and I am aware of the privileges bestowed onto me, that others who I share this world with do not have.
So, how can I go to a protest or rally and chant, carry a sign of intolerance & indifference, risk an arrest of civil disobedience, and represent those who are fighting for their rights and freedoms?  How can this white advantaged male have an honest idea of the struggles and anger that are being fought for?


I often feel like I don’t belong at certain marches, protests & rallies, feeling very white, very male and very privileged. I do not pretend to relate to the issue at hand, nor do I pretend that I have been a victim of the current protest, unless it is an issue that pertains to me directly, but many of the gatherings I attend do not. But that is a loaded issue for me. Do I have people in my life that I love dearly that are black, that are women, that are disabled, that are felt like their rights are not be honored? I absolutely do. They are my family, my daughters, my wife, my friends that I helped raised, my community. So I march for them. I protest for their rights. So their voices can be heard. So they can be respected, so they are free of this white male driven society that makes all the rules.
We are very different people sharing a common place. Though the air we breathe may be the same, the sun that shines on our faces (no matter what color our faces may be) is the same sun and the earth we walk upon is the same planet orbiting around the same universe, we are all treated differently. And often times, way too often, treated with disrespect, unfairness and hated for being different.


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