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The Invisible Veil Of White Supremacy

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As a white man coming from a relatively well-off, middle class family, I was unaware of just how much I didn’t understand about race and culture, and how they can impact one’s mental health until this class. What perpetuated this ignorance was in part due to the fact that I was raised in a small town of about 7,000 people—of whom, an overwhelming majority were white. Because of this, I was socialized in an environment in which whiteness and white culture were dominant and considered normal.
With almost no first hand experiences with people of color growing up, I quickly internalized the three myths that maintain the invisible veil of white supremacy in our culture. When I did have experiences with people of color, they often fit the stereotypes our culture has assigned to them and reinforced my confirmation bias and pity in believing that people of color are responsible for the disadvantaged state they’re in. While I don’t mean to say my parents or I haven’t worked hard to get where we are, they instilled in me the myth of meritocracy and made me believe that hard work unequivocally leads to success. This went hand in hand with thee myths of fair treatment and equal opportunity; they had always just seemed like truths to me because I rarely got first hand experiences with people of color in my childhood. I never questioned these myths and went on to believe them until this class when we discussed how my privileged status as a white man gave me the upper hand over people of

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