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This is a nice little read and for the minority of some people in america it is spot on. i skipped the personal relation story to just post the part in the middle but you should read it, its interesting.
Interesting look and awaking this person had to relate to it in another way. Anyway like I said for SOME people it is spot on and defines exactly the fantasy they are going through. Equal rights wins or the rights of others start being actually protected and they cry and scream and ask what bout my rights. But when they are asked what rights they are referring to they never have an answer or they give a right they never had and nobody does.
Im glad we keep improving as a country and im glad the majority understand this reality and the reality of equal rights, it makes me happy. For those that dont get it and want to fight it, oh well, they are losing and so is their hypocrisy and or bigotry. Hopefully for their sake they wake up and educate themselves to this issue, if not, its their loss.
[h=1]‘When You’re Accustomed to Privilege, Equality Feels Like Oppression’[/h]
..... things started making a little more sense to me. All this anger we see from people screaming “All Lives Matter” in response to black protesters at rallies. All this anger we see from people insisting that their “religious freedom” is being infringed because a gay couple wants to get married. All these people angry about immigrants, angry about Muslims, angry about “Happy Holidays,” angry about not being able to say bigoted things without being called a bigot...They all basically boil down to people who have grown accustomed to walking straight at other folks, and expecting them to move. So when “those people” in their path don’t move — when those people start wondering, “Why am I always moving out of this guy’s way?”; when those people start asking themselves, “What if I didn’t move? What if I just kept walking too?”; when those people start believing that they have every bit as much right to that aisle as anyone else — it can seem like their rights are being taken away. (They arent)
Equality can feel like oppression. But it’s not. What you’re feeling is just the discomfort of losing a little bit of your privilege — the same discomfort that an only child feels when she goes to preschool and discovers that there are other kids who want to play with the same toys as she does.It’s like an old man being used to having a community pool all to himself, having that pool actually opened up to everyone in the community, and then that old man yelling, “But what about MY right to swim in a pool all by myself?!”And what we’re seeing politically right now is a bit of anger from both sides. On one side, we see people who are angry about “those people” being let into “our” pool. They’re angry about sharing their toys with the other kids in the classroom.They’re angry about being labeled a “racist,” just because they say racist things and have racist beliefs. They’re angry about having to consider others who might be walking toward them, strangely exerting their right to exist. On the other side, we see people who believe that pool is for everyone. We see people who realize that when our kids throw a fit in preschool, we teach them about how sharing is the right thing to do. We see people who understand being careful with their language as a way of being respectful to others. We see people who are attempting to stand in solidarity with the ones who are claiming their right to exist — the ones who are rightfully angry about having to always move out of the way, people who are asking themselves the question, “What if I just keep walking?”
Interesting look and awaking this person had to relate to it in another way. Anyway like I said for SOME people it is spot on and defines exactly the fantasy they are going through. Equal rights wins or the rights of others start being actually protected and they cry and scream and ask what bout my rights. But when they are asked what rights they are referring to they never have an answer or they give a right they never had and nobody does.
Im glad we keep improving as a country and im glad the majority understand this reality and the reality of equal rights, it makes me happy. For those that dont get it and want to fight it, oh well, they are losing and so is their hypocrisy and or bigotry. Hopefully for their sake they wake up and educate themselves to this issue, if not, its their loss.