Why Discrimination Breeds More Discrimination in a Vicious Cycle
Introduction
Power and privilege is a two-way street: power can run both ways, depending on the circumstances or context. For example, a female Latina could be in a position of privilege and power in one environment and in a position of discrimination and prejudice in another environment. I know this from experience because I have been in both types of situations before in my life. What is interesting about being a Latina in America is that while most whites are not going to recognize you as one of their own, they also are not going to lump you in with other ethnic groups, such as blacks or Asians. To illustrate this, Zamudio and Lichter (2008) showed that hotel managers tend to prefer to hire Latinas over blacks in the hotel industry for whatever prejudicial reasons that managers have. On the other hand, Barajas and Ronnkvist (2007) show that in public schools racialized spaces can occur among Latina and white populations, creating tensions and hostility as these populations attempt to assert themselves in the face of perceived opposition from the other. McCabe (2009) has noted that on college campuses it is not uncommon for Latinas to experience microaggressions from whites who do not even realizing they are sending such signals, though at the same time Latinas could project microaggressions towards others, too. Thus, the road of power and privilege is a two-way street. In this paper, I will describe an instance in which I as a female Latina experienced discrimination and an instance in which I was the perpetrator of discrimination.
An Instance of Discrimination
For me, an instance of discrimination occurred when I was in my early teens. I was with a group of girlfriends at a clothing store when suddenly a woman began shouting that her wallet had been stolen. The woman was a middle-aged white women and she got everyone’s attention quickly. My friends and I were already heading towards the door when she starting yelling and we did not see any reason we should stay, but a security guard swooped down from nowhere and yelled at us that we could not leave. All of a sudden we were suspects in a crime and I could not help but feel that it was because we were the only ethnic people in the store. All suspicion fell upon us because we were young, different from the others, ethnically a minority, and therefore the obvious culprits. We were all offended by the implied...
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