New York Post

The signs are a-changing

Amid a war on ‘whiteness,’ ‘minority privilege’ is growing more common

- RAV ARORA Rav Arora specialize­s in topics of race, music, literature and culture. Follow him on Twitter @twitter.com/Ravarora1 and on Substack at ravarora.substack.com

THE left is furious about "white privilege." And while it’s true white people have benefited from major advantages over time, it’s a concept that is rapidly fading — especially now, as the reverse is coming true. Minorities are increasing­ly becoming privileged while growing numbers of white people face discrimina­tion.

Diversity initiative­s have been around for years, but over the past year and a half, innumerabl­e companies and corporatio­ns have ramped up their efforts with the goal of “diversifyi­ng” their workforce. Facebook, for example, has committed to half of its employees coming from “underrepre­sented communitie­s” (i.e., black, Native American, and Hispanic) by 2023. Best Buy is hiring one person of color for every three new hires over the next five years. United Airlines has promised that at least half of the pilots they will train in the next decade will be women and “people of color” (currently, only 13 percent of pilots are people of color).

In May, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot suddenly declared she will only give interviews to “journalist­s of color" — something that would be an impeachabl­e offense if the situation was reversed (only giving interviews to "white journalist­s").

The push to promote people of color has become so pervasive that the most objective scientific institutio­ns have seemingly become captive to woke ideology. For example, the NIH and CDC use taxpayer dollars to incentiviz­e biomedical research labs to hire ethnic minorities because "research shows that diverse teams working together and capitalizi­ng on innovative ideas and distinct perspectiv­es outperform homogenous teams" — without quoting or citing any actual research.

Minorities are now even advantaged when seeking medical treatment. Last week, the New York City and state department­s of health authorized life-saving antiviral treatment for COVID-19 for everyone belonging to a “non-white race or Hispanic/Latino ethnicity” regardless of risk factors, but for whites, only those with risk factors are allowed it.

The DOH cites its rationale as: “longstandi­ng systemic health and social inequities have contribute­d to an increased risk of severe illness and death from COVID-19.”

Meanwhile, the rise of minority advantage has come with a parallel war on whiteness, especially in academia. In June, the Journal of the American Psychoanal­ytic Associatio­n — “one of the world’s most respected publicatio­ns in psychoanal­ysis” — printed a peer-reviewed paper entitled “On Having Whiteness.” The abstract of the paper describes “whiteness” as a “malignant, parasitic-like condition” requiring “effective treatment consist[ing] of a combinatio­n of psychic and social-historical interventi­ons.” It adds, "there is not yet a permanent cure." There are real, accredited university courses that instruct anti-white racism: "Race Theory & the Problem of Whiteness" (Arizona State University) and "Abolition of Whiteness" (Hunter College).

Institutio­nalized anti-white bigotry has escalated to genocidal rhetoric. As Bari Weiss revealed in her recent Substack piece, Yale University hosted a lecture by Dr. Aruna Khilanani this year about the "The Psychopath­ic Problem of the White Mind," where the speaker revealed her fantasies to kill white people. Other than university administra­tors later saying the lecture was found to have "tone and content antithetic­al to the values of the school,” the backlash was tempered. While social media erupted and Khilanani’s Manhattan-based practice is now closed for unknown reasons, she still has her license. One can only imagine the riotous demonstrat­ions that would have reverberat­ed across the country had Yale hosted a talk about "The Psychopath­ic Problem of the Black Mind."

The upshot is that pro-minority bias is not only permitted but socially incentiviz­ed. Employers, professors and administra­tors are lauded for implementi­ng radical diversity initiative­s. As minorities are preferenti­ally hired across the board and given a host of other benefits by way of their genetic lottery, we must fundamenta­lly reframe our discourse surroundin­g race relations.

While "white privilege" may still exist in some margins of society, it no longer reflects the progressiv­e era we live in.

 ?? ?? Anti-white-privilege protests have taken a detour into racial hiring quotas at top companies and college courses on “the Problem of Whiteness.”
Anti-white-privilege protests have taken a detour into racial hiring quotas at top companies and college courses on “the Problem of Whiteness.”
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