Sunday, February 26, 2023
Alan Johnson: Where White Privilege Came From- Main Argument
Johnson is arguing that white privilege, which refers to the unearned benefits and advantages that white people enjoy in society simply because they are white, is deeply ingrained in American history and culture. The author uses personal anecdotes and historical examples to illustrate how white privilege has been passed down through generations, and how it is perpetuated by the system of race and racism in the country. Johnson suggests that acknowledging and understanding this history is important for addressing the moral dilemmas and injustices that result from it, and that stepping off the path of least resistance and actively working towards creating a more equitable society is essential in dismantling white privilege.
The image I chose spoke to me about our current political climate and the massive show of white privilage that we saw after the January sixth riots.
Sunday, February 5, 2023
Jonathan Kozol: Amazing Grace - Quotes
“The children play near the bears or on the jungle gym while their mothers wait
for needles” Pg.12
I felt that this line was particularly powerful. The image of
children playing while their parent waits for the needles they need to use drugs
that will slowly destroy their bodies is horrific. To know with such clarity
that there are people in this country who grow up in such circumstances is
heartbreaking. It makes me feel my privilege in the form of a weight on my
chest.
“How do they know, when someone calls, that youre not dying” pg. 15
This
quote comes from a part of the text discussing how in the poorer hospitals, the
nurses may not arrive to a call for more than a half hour. Also within this
portion of the text, the hospitals are described as being far from up-to-code.
It brings forth the image of someone calling for help and then dying alone on
unwashed sheets, all the while hoping someone will come to save them. While I
hope these conditions have improved since 1995, I feel that the coverage on the
Covid-19 pandemic showed us that things have scarcely changed in the poorer
parts of our cities.
“I saw the prostitutes lined up for condoms, I saw the drug
users lined up for needles, it was like seeing a line of ghosts, it looked like
all the people there were dying” pg. 23
I picked this quote because it felt so
raw and true. I have watched relatives waste away on street drugs, and I know
the empty look in their eyes, I know how it hurts to see the weight falling off
of them over time. People line the streets, live on the streets, raise their
children in these conditions, it's truly awful.
“There’s a whole world out there
if you know it's there, if you can see it. But they’re in a cage. They cannot
see” pg. 24
This quote, while uncomfortable to read and acknowledge, gives me a
modicum of hope. We, as educators, can help people see beyond the confines of
their social status. We can show our students that there is a world out there
that they have the ability to change. We can change our society one student at a
time.
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