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View Full Version : Appalachian State dorm bulletin board shames 'privileged' students



Teh One Who Knocks
03-17-2015, 10:55 AM
Kaitlyn Schallhorn - Campus Reform


http://i.imgur.com/JFw6bf4.jpg

A bulletin board hung by a resident assistant in a primarily freshmen and sophomore dorm shames those who are have white, male, Christian, able-bodied, heterosexual, or cisgendered “privilege.”

“Why can’t I hold all this male privilege,” reads one meme on the bulletin board hanging at Appalachian State University.

“‘I don’t see color’ which also means I deny having white privilege,” reads another flier on the red board adorned with colorful puzzle pieces.

The fliers are products of the “Check Your Privilege” campaign started by three University of San Francisco professors, as previously reported by Campus Reform.

“If you can expect time off from work to celebrate your religious holidays, you have Christian privilege,” one flier reads.

http://i.imgur.com/HwGsV3F.jpg

http://i.imgur.com/ikJNyX8.jpg

According to Laurel Littler, a junior commercial photography major at Appalachian State, the bulletin board was approved and put up by the hall’s RA.

“A residential hall is the last place to push an agenda,” Littler told Campus Reform. “When I come home, I want to feel accepted, not outcasted for something I can't help. I can't help that I'm Caucasian. Will they be happy if I change the color of my skin so I don't have my ‘white privilege’ anymore? I want to be comfortable in my own skin. You can't preach equality if you aren't willing to let a people group feel accepted as they are.”

Littler said that since college is supposed to be a “marketplace of ideas,” college students should not only have the freedom to state opinions but also the freedom to challenge the ideas of others.

“A person has to use common sense and sensitivity to a person’s background when addressing issues,” she said.

According to Mike Herbert, a sophomore communication major who lives on the hall, coming back to school after Spring Break to see the bulletin board only added to the already contentious relationship between students on the hall and the RA, who took over only a few months prior.

“It was like a slap in the face,” Herbert told Campus Reform in an exclusive phone interview Monday afternoon. “Although a lot of us have similar views as he does, we feel like it’s a giant middle finger to us.”

Herbert said one flier on the bulletin board told students who didn’t understand “what was wrong with [them]” to come to the RA’s dorm room so that he could “enlighten” them.

“At the end of the day, it is important to realize privilege, realize class difference, so that people can learn and engage with other people,” Herbert said. “In this particular instance, it’s very condescending. It’s arrogant. It’s very holier-than-thou.”

“He’s supposed to be our RA,” said Herbert, who told Campus Reform that he agreed with the bulletin board’s message. “It’s his job to make sure we don’t burn down the place and go to school. It’s not his job to flaunt his own personal and political views, even if we agree with him.”

Herbert said he would be fine with the bulletin board existing in a more public area on campus that was sponsored by a student group such as App State’s LGBT group.

“I’m sure there are people who disagree with the views he presents [with the bulletin board in the dorm] which is a big problem for the RA to alienate people this way,” he said.

According to App State’s website, RAs are “mentors” to between 30 and 60 students.

“The RA is responsible for facilitating a cooperative and considerate community environment,” the website states. “To achieve this goal, the RA is expected to initiate relationships with residents, encourage participation in hall and area programs, and inform residents of university and departmental policies. In addition, the RA assists with the personal and academic concerns of students, mediates interpersonal conflicts, and serves as an information resource for residents.”

Neither the residence director of the dorm—East Hall—nor the Senior Associate Director of Residence Life at App State responded to a request for comment from Campus Reform.

App State also did not respond to a request for comment from Campus Reform.

RBP
03-17-2015, 11:32 AM
:roll:

Not surprising.

perrhaps
03-17-2015, 12:40 PM
If I behead an aide worker, and expect to be rewarded by deflowering virgins in the afterlife for all eternity, do I have Islamic privilege?

deebakes
03-17-2015, 12:46 PM
i wish i didn't feel so privileged :sad2:

RBP
03-17-2015, 03:12 PM
If I behead an aide worker, and expect to be rewarded by deflowering virgins in the afterlife for all eternity, do I have Islamic privilege?
I can intellectually understand Islamic extremists more easily than I can understand social justice warriors in a rich country.

perrhaps
03-17-2015, 03:50 PM
I can intellectually understand Islamic extremists more easily than I can understand social justice warriors in a rich country.

Frivolity is a byproduct of a rich society. It's hard to be a pompous ass when you're dirt poor.

Loser
03-17-2015, 04:11 PM
I had a tenant of mine try that white privilege shit on me, saying I'm a slave owner because I'm a landlord...

I looked dead in his eyes and said..."If you don't want to be a slave anymore, stop letting the government pay your rent"

He shut up and walked away from me.

Made my week :lol:

Hal-9000
03-17-2015, 04:26 PM
“If you can expect time off from work to celebrate your religious holidays, you have Christian privilege,” one flier reads.

EVERY non white person I've ever worked with expects to have and observes the same days off as I do, living in Canada.

I get so tired of people tagging 'Christian' onto holidays that are cultural observances of a country.

Like I've always said - I've worked Christmas, Boxing, New Years and Labor Days...and never saw a brown face once here doing the same :-k

RBP
03-17-2015, 05:21 PM
I had a tenant of mine try that white privilege shit on me, saying I'm a slave owner because I'm a landlord...

I looked dead in his eyes and said..."If you don't want to be a slave anymore, stop letting the government pay your rent"

He shut up and walked away from me.

Made my week :lol:
:+1:

Hal-9000
03-17-2015, 05:41 PM
Frivolity is a byproduct of a rich society. It's hard to be a pompous ass when you're dirt poor.

How true.

My father never complained/threw things in our faces while we were growing up regarding how much money that he DIDN'T have. Found out later from my Aunt what the actual score was...

Dad was working seismic, making about 600 per month, often working six days a week. Three kids, a wife and a mortgage of approximately 250/mo (when we were all in school) along wtih a car loan. My folks bought a second hand car and discovered later there was a lien on it, that they had to assume and pay. I guess that almost killed them...the lien coupled with all of their other monthly bills put them too far into debt to survive. By chance my Pa got a 100 dollar a month raise around the same time, because he would work anywhere in S.W. Canada and for any amount of hours they asked.

I remember my Mom cutting out coupons every week until she was in her 60's....the habit never stopped regardless of how much my Dad's wage/job duties changed in later years. I asked him about the car...he confirmed and said that he didn't sleep for almost 6 months, because he had got the house mortgage and car around the same time.

We didn't have much, but our clothes were always clean and there was always food in our house. And I can still remember bitching at my parents because we didn't have cable TV or color TV when the other kids had it :( I was a total ass and had no idea how much they sacrificed...







and then people tell me about growing up with white privilege??? Those same people pointing their fingers at me wear 200 dollar kicks and Tweet on 600 dollar iPhones.....poor little darlings....

Hal-9000
03-17-2015, 05:51 PM
okay so it was an RA in a college campus going beyond social parameters for this story and I went deep into my personal past :oops:


but ffs, don't assume a race has everything when you have not walked in their shoes...

DemonGeminiX
03-17-2015, 06:08 PM
It doesn't matter who it was, it's still a big hot steaming pile of bullshit and your story is a prime example of why it's a big hot steaming pile of bullshit.

I have a similar story. And many of us probably do.

Teh One Who Knocks
03-17-2015, 06:14 PM
My parents separated when I was 9 and my little brother was 5. After he took off, we had nothing. My mom had to apply for welfare benefits plus she worked 3 jobs to make ends meet. We had to live in a dumpy little apartment and at 9 years old I was taking care of my brother in the evenings because my mom had to work and couldn't be home. So I was doing the cooking for him and me and keeping the house clean as much as I could. But it went on that way for several years. I had parts time jobs from 12 years old on to give the money to my mom to help with expenses. It was a constant struggle just to get thru the day somedays and it took a toll on my mom, I could see it in her face. But, we always had a clean place and a roof over our heads and we had food to eat.

Hal-9000
03-17-2015, 06:17 PM
It doesn't matter who it was, it's still a big hot steaming pile of bullshit and your story is a prime example of why it's a big hot steaming pile of bullshit.

I have a similar story. And many of us probably do.



Thanks mang....we used to have couriers roll up to work and say that since we worked for an established company with benefits etc, that we were all getting paid MUCH BETTER in the warehouse...

I finally challenged a guy in front of one of his courier coworkers ....Ok dude, I make 100 dollars per day after taxes and benefits and that's after working for my company for 20 years. How much do you guys make? After paying for his fuel and insurance, on a slow day he cleared 190-200 dollars. Yep he worked hard starting at 6:30 am and working till 7 pm some nights...but as he realized, the grass is not always greener...

Hal-9000
03-17-2015, 06:26 PM
My parents separated when I was 9 and my little brother was 5. After he took off, we had nothing. My mom had to apply for welfare benefits plus she worked 3 jobs to make ends meet. We had to live in a dumpy little apartment and at 9 years old I was taking care of my brother in the evenings because my mom had to work and couldn't be home. So I was doing the cooking for him and me and keeping the house clean as much as I could. But it went on that way for several years. I had parts time jobs from 12 years old on to give the money to my mom to help with expenses. It was a constant struggle just to get thru the day somedays and it took a toll on my mom, I could see it in her face. But, we always had a clean place and a roof over our heads and we had food to eat.

The thing that I love about my folks was that they never laid down the truth to us kids...not once. We would complain and they would just get quiet and say that's the way it is.

When I look back, they could have said a whole lot more and explained that because we needed shoes and school tuitions and dinner every night for 5 people....that would be a reason why we didn't have the nicest TV's or toys or whatever...not once did they complain...

I stopped complaining when I was about 17 or 19...as soon as I realized how much life costs and how hard you have to work to attain things.

Loser
03-17-2015, 07:06 PM
I was born and raised between the former and current murder capitol, Gary indiana and the south side of chicago.

Grew up beyond poor. Was a good day to have ham in our mac and cheese. That's not an exaggeration.

Dropped out at 16, got my honors diploma a day before my 17th birthday because I busted my ass. 3.9 gpa. Couldn't afford college.

Worked 2 jobs for god only knows how many years. Didn't waste money on "bling". Invested money intelligently. Now own multiple properties, including a lake house on a 2 acre lot, and pretty much never have to work another day of hard labor in my life.

White privilege? Fuck no. And when people say that shit to my face, it's no better then them shitting on my lunch.

I got what I have because I worked my fucking ass off, and if anyone says otherwise, they can kiss my "white" ass, brown eye and all. :lol:

Hal-9000
03-17-2015, 07:28 PM
I was born and raised between the former and current murder capitol, Gary indiana and the south side of chicago.

Grew up beyond poor. Was a good day to have ham in our mac and cheese. That's not an exaggeration.

Dropped out at 16, got my honors diploma a day before my 17th birthday because I busted my ass. 3.9 gpa. Couldn't afford college.

Worked 2 jobs for god only knows how many years. Didn't waste money on "bling". Invested money intelligently. Now own multiple properties, including a lake house on a 2 acre lot, and pretty much never have to work another day of hard labor in my life.

White privilege? Fuck no. And when people say that shit to my face, it's no better then them shitting on my lunch.

I got what I have because I worked my fucking ass off, and if anyone says otherwise, they can kiss my "white" ass, brown eye and all. :lol:


preach it brother :thumbsup:

I didn't attain things like you did, and I was never given anything...no car, no grad present, no stipend to use for whatever, no grant from the government...never claimed for unemployment insurance and there were times I could of really used it...

didn't have a credit card until I was 36....because everything I bought previous to that, I worked and saved for. I sacrificed everything else to get the thing I needed at the time..


now if I could only invent the app that EVERYONE wants and needs, I would be set :sad2:

Hal-9000
03-17-2015, 07:32 PM
:-k

the more posts I read, the more I realize that White Privilege really means = work hard and sacrifice.

None of us were 'born into it' here and we have a pretty broad cross section of people.







*gives everyone a virtual pat on the back*

Hal-9000
03-17-2015, 07:34 PM
*except Porky because he took over his pops cocaine cartel business and he's not really white anyways*

KevinD
03-17-2015, 09:58 PM
Fuck you Kanye. Lol

Noilly Pratt
03-17-2015, 10:34 PM
I hear you. I was the first in my family to go to College and get a diploma. Growing up, we lived in an Ontario town that was like the old "Company Store" towns. You made enough to make a living, but you weren't ever going to prosper and there was only about 1 or 2 places to work without driving for hours.

My dad, wanting a better life, at age 50(my age!) moved to the west of Canada. We sold the house and basically blew through the money getting to this province over a 2 year period. My dad worked odd jobs where he could.

The kicker was, at about 55 he landed a great job and 3 years later we had a car accident that gave him a hairline crack in his spine, and he'd never work again. So, it was on me to drive him to specialists, lawyers etc.

He died at 64, and his body just plain wore out...gone through all that in other posts.

After the out-of-court settlement came in, he helped pay for my college, but I did the majority (at my own insistence...my dad would have given me the world if he could) on my own, working 3 part-time jobs (cleaning offices) whilst at College. Feels good to say that.

Hal-9000
03-18-2015, 04:58 PM
I think I fit into about 5 categories on that bulletin board



:dance:




do I win a white achievement trophy or an unlimited lifetime credit card?? :face:

Teh One Who Knocks
03-18-2015, 05:02 PM
http://i.imgur.com/gYIs7.jpg