CES 100
Racism, as well as institutional racism, have become majorly influential topics in the U.S. Through the generations White privilege has solidified as an advantage for the few, but not for the masses. Yet, this poisonous mentality is still thought of as a form of justification to racially discriminate ethnic minorities. Bigotry is both managed and preserved through matters that involve characteristics and intellect. Although, research and scientific analyses ' discredit these sustained ideologies.
In order to best understand the topic of this paper, both white privilege and racism will be defined. White privilege will be defined as A right, advantage, or immunity granted to or enjoyed by white persons beyond the common …show more content…
White skin privilege serves several functions. First, it provides white people with “perks” that most people of color do not earn and get to enjoy. Second, it creates real advantages for us. White people are immune to a lot of basic challenges such as having complimentary shampoo generally works with the texture of their hair, or having flesh-colored band-aids which generally match their skin tone. Finally, white privilege shapes the world in such a way that we navigate and interact with one another and with the world as will be demonstrated later in this paper through different races. Racism for the purpose of this paper will be defined as the belief that all members of a alleged race possess characteristics, abilities, or qualities specific to that race, especially so as to distinguish it as inferior or superior to another race or other races. Racism is a particular form of prejudice defined by preconceived erroneous beliefs about race and members of racial groups (Holladay).To better understand racism and the discourse on the meaning, Holladay …show more content…
152). In the same volume, Fredrickson quoted the sociologist Loic Wacquant as advocating “forsaking once and for all the inflammatory and exceedingly ductile category of ‘racism’ save as a descriptive term referring to the empirically analyzable doctrines and beliefs about race” (pp. 152–153). This is why for the sake of this paper, racism will simply be defined as the belief that all members of a purported race possess characteristics, abilities, or qualities specific to that race, especially so as to distinguish it as inferior or superior to another race or other races. Now that both white privilege and racism have both been defined, there are powerful implications in which they interact with each other.
When looking at white privilege and racism as a whole, Andolsen (1990) argued that moral theologians must analyze the evolving contours of racism as a social sin. For example, she indicated that the large influx of immigrants from Africa to the United States throughout the 1990s might undercut usual moral approaches to retributive justice as a norm when discussing topics like affirmative action. She cautioned that white, non-Hispanic Catholics might