This conversation is rather hard to follow, so I might be misinterpreting this, but - seriously? Privilege is not synonymous with success.
I am very VERY hard to follow so I don't blame you.
My words was a counterpoint that any advantage someone has over someone else "needs to be dealt with".
So I gave an example of an advantage that not only cannot be dealt with, but would be oppressive if it could.
As well if an advantage doesn't lead to success, you are no longer advantaged. As well an advantage that isn't accessible isn't an advantage either
That's hardly a meaningful disadvantage.
I think your drawing a lot more from what I am saying than what I intended, but let me try to catch you up to the conversation. Yes it isn't a meaningful disadvantage, well it is sociopathy if taken to its logical conclusion, but I was simply laying the ground work that just because something is an advantage it doesn't mean that advantage cannot come with sizable or even overwhelming disadvantages that might make it impossible to gauge.
I was simply calling back to an earlier point in the conversation where it was outright said that "Privilege" comes with that disadvantage, therefor one cannot say that privilege is always pure advantage.
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Or rather my goal is to challenge the precepts that "Check your Privilege" is based on. That it requires a lot of assumptions about a person, society, their gender, their race, the color of their skin, their orientation. That it requires assumptions about their lives and how the advantages present themselves.
It requires an assumption of perpetual victimhood and eternal victimizer.
To say nothing of how it is actually used "Do something about it!" Vs. What it actually means. (At which I have yet to see it used properly once)
Which is why I am going through this conversation.