« Reply #77 on: Friday 24 July 20 21:30 BST (UK) »
"puts the white male at a distinct disadvantage"
When you're used to being privileged from birth, equality feels like disadvantage.
I'm white, from a white family and my children were brought up in a council house for nine years. their father died from overwork.when the youngest was 17. How does that make us "used to privilege"? Furthermore, due to government constraints my daughter, on return from living abroad couldn't secure a permanent state teaching job. fortunately she was able to secure a part teaching job in a private school but only being paid when in contact with her pupils - for instance she was given ten minutes pay for supervising her pupils from the sports field to their next lesson under another teacher.
As an ex-forces wife I'm used to having pals of various shades and nationalities which includes visiting each others homes daily, weekly and for parties, thus I don't need any lectures thank you very much.
Different aspects of our lives can bring privilege with them.
Being born poor or into a working class family clearly doesn't but being white does.
So many white people are blind to the fact that being white has made many aspects of their life easier than if they'd been born as a person of colour.
Our ethnicity, biological sex, gender identity, sexuality, being disabled or able bodied, class, religion (amongst others) and how they are perceived by society at large prevent life from being a level playing field.
"perceived by society at large prevent life from being a level
playing field"
Thank you for your thoughts on what does/does not constitute a level playing field.
Does it not enter certain people's train of thoughts that there is a reason why tribes in the north have white skin, but some white and dark skinned people of the generations born in the late 20th and early 21st century now blame white skins for wanting to stay and work on the continent nature assigned them to.
I was born in the 1930s when there were few females in offices. I won a placement in an office at the same time as a young man of the same age. We both did a similar job but in different offices and we received the same salary until the age of 18 when his wage packet held more than mine. Not many years later and the country was experiencing a slow down in orders. I received a one pound (£1.00) per week raise in salary and instructed not to speak about it as only eleven people of the several hundred workers had received a raise, and the other ten white coated managers only received a quarter of my raise. There were ructions the next day when a lax HR manager didn't hide the figures and word spread around the factory like wildfire that a chit of a girl had received more money than the men
As for job seekers; first impressions as soon as the applicant enters the room are important. Dress appropriately, put shoulders back, head up, put a pair of clean shoes forward. smile, look the interviewer in the eye and show that you've researched basic information about company.
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