because a homeless white man has so much privilege. Also if I was to work in a low paid job I'd be earning less than the average woman. This insistence on talking about gender and race privilege is absurd when there's a much bigger divide between the poor and the wealthy. It's an attempt to paint all people of a certain gender or race as "privileged" despite how ridiculous the notion is.
Again you really have no clue what privilege is. I suggest some reading material for you. I doubt you will read it though-
http://everydayfeminism.com/2012/12/how-to-talk-to-someone-about-privilege/
http://www.agjohnson.us/glad/what-is-a-system-of-privilege/
http://www.tolerance.org/article/racism-and-white-privilege
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_...h_our_conversation_about_white_privilege.html
From the second link-
<
It’s important to note that privilege does not guarantee good outcomes for the privileged group or bad outcomes for everyone else. A white person, for example, can work hard and have little to show for it, can be mistreated by the police without cause, be denied a job they’re qualified for.
What privilege does is load the odds one way or the other so that the chance of bad things happening to white people as a category of people is much lower than for everyone else, and the chance of good things happening is much higher. Privilege is not something a person can have, like a possession, as in “Where’s mine?” Instead, it is a characteristic of the social system—like a rule in a game—in which everyone participates.
A system of privilege—a family, a workplace, a society—is organized around three basic principles: dominance, identification, and centeredness. >
And this is the same with privilege with gender.
This is just perfect. It just shows just how lacking in honesty and critical analysis feminist ideology is. You know admittedly little about my country but you are willing to make judgement on my country and many other countries in the world because feminist ideology has told you what to think. Even the fact that there are matriarchal societies in the world where men have no property rights does not deter you from proclaiming that all men everywhere have more privilege. Yours is not an evidence based approach. Your approach is to draw conclusions first and then find ways to apply that conclusion to everyone in the world. Your approach is an example of why I believe gender studies are more akin to a religion (and a fundamentalist one at that) than a science.
This is the perfect response-
<
It’s important to note that privilege does not guarantee good outcomes for the privileged group or bad outcomes for everyone else. A white person, for example, can work hard and have little to show for it, can be mistreated by the police without cause, be denied a job they’re qualified for. What privilege does is load the odds one way or the other so that the chance of bad things happening to white people as a category of people is much lower than for everyone else, and the chance of good things happening is much higher.
Privilege is not something a person can have, like a possession, as in “Where’s mine?” Instead, it is a characteristic of the social system—like a rule in a game—in which everyone participates.
A system of privilege—a family, a workplace, a society—is organized around three basic principles: dominance, identification, and centeredness.>
Link-
http://www.agjohnson.us/glad/what-is-a-system-of-privilege/
Other wise you're just repeating the same thing you did before so see my previous posts to you. So, I find it quite amusing you're talking about me with my approach but what have you done? Just repeated the same thing over and over again. Hence why I stopped talking to you. You're still pointing to the same example of a queen and where men don't have property rights and you're just really repeating yourself and not saying anything new or interesting or informative. It really doesn't seem like you have much else to offer. So unless you have something else interesting or new or informative to add I'm just not going to respond anymore.
And please don't personally insult me with "feminism telling me what to say." I'm a 33 young adult woman with a college education and have studied psychology, sociology, and criminology along with my degree's. If you can't talk to me without going that route please just don't and save us both the trouble. Thanks. I would appreciate it.
And, as the Slate article said, it's not about what you get it's what about the other people don't get.
If you think gender studies is a religion you're ridiculous. It's sociology.