Sure, I have been searched through customs in different countries.
I have not been in a traffic stop ever but I had been under fire (from military, not quite police so maybe not as scary?), does it count?
>Please tell me about all the times your value as a human being has been determined solely based upon your appearance.
I imagine you did not think this one through, you are actually implying my value as a human being has been determined high based on my appearance.
PS.
Seeing your edit, how is it related to being enslaved for generations and oppressed after that? I have all rights to be afraid of racist cops of different color. I am not a woman so my chances of assault and murder are way higher, check out statistic before repeating ignorance. And yes, I am not disabled, are you saying everyone else is???
> I have all rights to be afraid of racist cops of different color.
Especially if they're racist against you, of course you do. That's the point. Please see my reply to 'flukus's comment that is a sibling to yours.
> I am not a woman so my chances of assault and murder are way higher...
I was speaking primarily of domestic violence. If you give any kind of credence to the statistics about how under-reported that is, women get beat up a lot more often than men.
I am not sure I understand. Are you saying there is no racism against whites or it does not exist in the US so, in fact, I should not be afraid of anti-white racists?
> If you don't have to worry about all the shit that comes along with those things then you have privilege, regardless of your skin color.
Of course. Race and privilege are only joined insofar as their cultural context makes them. In a society that's virulently prejudiced against grey-eyed Slavs, 'pandaman is necessarily going to be "less privileged" than whoever that society favors.
That's exactly what the concept was created to indicate: how much of a given society's aggregate human mental garbage (racism, sexism, ableism, whatever-else-ism) a given person has to deal with, on the basis of who they happen to be, within that society.