“I confront [white guilt] every year, about a month into my course on racism, among [white] students who come to me in tears because they cannot deal with the racism that goes on in their families or their home towns or their student residences. Their tears are the result of genuine anguish, care, and a desire to learn and to change. I confront similar attitudes among my colleagues, and I am similarly gratified by their concern. But those who experience white guilt need to learn three things:

1) People of colour are generally not moved by their tears, and may even see those tears as a self-indulgent expression of white privilege. It is after all a great privilege to be able to express one’s emotion openly and to be confident that one is in a cultural context where one’s feelings will be understood.

2) Guilt is paralysing. It serves no purposes; it does no good. It is not a substitute for activism.

3) White guilt is often patronizing if it leads to pity for those of colour. Pity gets in the way of sincere and meaningful human relationships, and it forestalls the frankness that meaningful relationships demand. White guilt will not change the racialized environment; it will only make the guilty feel better.”

— “Women of Colour in Canadian Academia,” Audrey Kobayashi

@aby erm.... I'm irish hun. We don't have the "white privilege" thing.....
White privilege is real and it exists in Ireland

White Irish people are expert at denying the extent of society’s racial prejudice

The Irish Times
@aby makes it true then....... the poor irish folk were slaves too ..... try reading.

@dharkin115

Reading?

Like this?

"The Irish slaves myth is a fringe pseudohistorical narrative that conflates the penal transportation and indentured servitude of Irish people during the 17th and 18th centuries, with the hereditary chattel slavery experienced by the forebears of the African diaspora. Some white nationalists, and others who want to minimize the effects of hereditary chattel slavery on Africans and their descendants, have used this false equivalence to deny racism against African Americans or claim that African Americans are too vocal in seeking justice for historical grievances. It also can hide the facts around Irish involvement in the transatlantic slave trade."

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_slaves_myth

Irish slaves myth - Wikipedia

@aby just read the article. Seems to be about racism and not white privilege. Also talks about the myth of irish slavery being "used" as similiar to perpetual chattel slavery. Never heard this once myself... the slavery was real but nowhere near anything like the same as chattel slavery at all.
@dharkin115 - I'm not engaging with you any more. You're posting white nationalist talking points and are ignoring the fact you've been refuted numerous times now.
@aby also...... and this is a big one.... try visiting :)