Category Archives: privilege series

On cars….

Rewatching Top Gear – in season 7, if you’re a fan – and was reminded that the Mazda convertible is a good car – and a great car for the price. (Clarkson agreed with Hammond so it must be true.) I’d seen a lot around town but didn’t know much about them, so was rather dismissive. Turns out, for those who know cars, it’s a nerdy but great car. Again, I think that says something about this town.  There are a bunch of economical car nerds around here.  Can’t say that’s a bad thing.

On Privilege…again

I’ve been watching a lot of Top Gear recently and it’s got me looking at the world in a different way…
I used to count the number of luxury cars vs the number of Priuses (Priui?) I saw on my way to work. Luxury cars defined as – Mercedes-Benz, BMW, Porsche, Lexus (for pretensions to luxury), Jaguar and any super cars I saw (and I saw a couple in one walk). The Prius won by a nose. Then I counted how many luxury cars (this time including the Prius and any other hybrid) vs trucks. The trucks won, barely.  If I tried to count the number of Subarus vs luxury makes, it would probably end in a similar result.
In Portland, if I counted the number of luxury cars vs the transients I saw…I think the luxury cars would win. By a lot.
I don’t know what to make of that. Perhaps it was a function of the neighborhoods I travelled through in there, perhaps it was a fluke of weather or a local event. In Ashland, the number seems to stay fairly constant (today I saw a beautifully restored muscle car – big fins and all).
Maybe the number of BMWs and Mercs on a city street is not a good measure of that city’s wealth. But the ratio of luxury cars to transients does seem to be a ratio of privilege.

Privilege: Names as mountains to climb

At the moment #blackpeoplenames is trending on Twitter.  Not so long ago #whitepeoplenames was trending.  

Mass trending topics are a good reminder that there are a lot of teenagers on Twitter. Digging deep into them reminds me of all the stuff I didn’t like about high school – but I digress.

One comment that kept repeating for #whitepeoplenames was “Any name that you can find on those key chains” and for #blackpeoplenames “Any name that you can’t find on those key chains”. 

I remember as a kid going up to those bookmarks and key chains and hoping I’d find my name.  I never did, but each time I hoped and each time that familiar disappointment kicked in.  I wasn’t alone – I had a friend who had a common name spelled in an uncommon way, she never found her name spelled properly either.  

The world isn’t perfect, and never will be, but I do wonder what that does to children.  You’re told from a very young age by commerce (which seems like the world at that age) that your name is weird.  Parents say unique, kids at school say dumb.  I was lucky – mine was different but sounded mainstream enough that I rarely got teased for my name.  (In fact the only rhyme that one of my third grade classmates could find for it was lasagna, which apparently wasn’t any fun because he never repeated it.)

But what about those kids with names that are more different than most of their classmates’ names?  Or children named after a celebrated relative or whose name can identify them as the sixth generation of their family? Not to say that parents shouldn’t name their kids whatever they want (I have every intention of inflicting a family name on one of my future children that my mother would rather I didn’t), but I do think parents should at least consider what they are doing. What privileges are you giving to your child, or taking away from your child, by the name that they are given?

Each person makes of their name what they will (some people I’ve known with some names make me dislike the name…until I meet someone else with the same name who is wonderful) but some names are mountains to climb.  The least a parent who blesses their child with Mt Everest can do is also teach the child how to hike.

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Privilege is still on my mind, so there may be another one of these to come…