@@randomwatcher2848 people can have it bad while others have it worse. I don't understand why people can never get this. Imagine if we looked at every problem like, "Oh someone has it far worse so your problem doesn't/shouldn't matter." Someone/something can always be worse than you.
Sometimes people aren’t aware or just don’t appreciate that they were born in a great family. It seems boring and monotonous, so they seek thrills in what dysfunctional people would consider escapism. The only difference is they have the ability to return to a stable environment. Despite this, the delusion that “true love/happiness” could be ever be found in a cesspool can become so strong that it begins they dysfunctional cycle of abuse all over again. The person gets hurt, never gets over it, takes it out on the kid so on and so forth
This is not said often enough. Having a stable loving family is a privilege I feel like the majority of us did not experience and the repercussion last for the rest of your life.
As a disabled person I totally agree with where we at on the list, yeah i'm playing the game of life in hard mode but that makes it that bit sweeter when you obtain your goals
This reminds me of that black lady that was in trump's election night video. In so many words she said the same thing. Just bc they had more money her family's values changed, so they changed to Republican...
@@Prplflwr well it's the idea that you want to horde as much money and influence for yourself and your children... This ideal LEADS to corruption and dictatorships. The sad part is if your a minority all that it buys you ultimately is time. When they get done with all the poorer people if you ain't next to the big man you're next.
@@lpk6372 Having a choice on how you use your wealth doesn’t breed corruption, you only do it to yourself, there are plenty of wealthy people with good hearts and helping the communities around them without government intervention.
You guys influence a whole bunch of emotions. I hate your opinions, then I love your opinions I’m sad about your opinions, then I’m angry at your opinions This was possibly your best and most honest video I’ve seen from you. Thanks guys!
Same. I like them, I like some things they said, and laughed at some other things they said. Never got angry tho, not worth it getting angry on the internet.
As a person who has gone through some messed up things I kinda disagree with the whole abuse thing. While it's crippling, yes, once you have been/ through enough you gain strength through numbness. You learn to harden yourself in preparation for a much bigger storm.
i cant rember the comedian but i was watching a comedian and he was talking bout idiots that say money isnt every thing he was like u go to pick up ur check on friday ur happy right ur boss dosnt have ur check see how happy u are
@@goodlookinouthomie1757 money is a amplifier it just makes what u have in side more clear the difrence is knowing why ur earning money if ur earning for the sake of earning it wont ever be enought but if ur got goals then you will know when to settle
IQ is in big part environnementally influened and a little part by your genetics, if you're parents had high IQ there is high change you will inherit that if your parents stimulate you brain at a early age, so I'd say people with a higher amount of money are advantaged because they can pay for high tier tutors, high tier education, etc.. So to me the IQ privilege should be mixed in with the money privilege.
@@dontbother9473 Tell that to the housing crisis buddy. Let me know when I can work 60 hours/week getting paid *above minimum-wage* , and still be able to afford a one-room apartment without needing 2 roommates, working the same times as I do, who sleep on the couch and an air-mattress. And that's considered a *privilege* ?
Before I watch I’d say the biggest privileges are being attractive, born into wealth (so most upper/middle class westerners), and being born with a good support system in place (stable household, present parents, etc.)
I agree I'd say wealth and having living caring parents are some of the biggest privilages the amount of times I've seen well off parents bail there kid out of trouble involving money like rent or money for school yeah those kids get a kick ass life and basically a free ride financially for decades.
So true, I just realized the privilege of having a supportive family, especially for a girl born in the middle east where traditions decide everything for you. It made the other unprivileges I have seem small.
I like how you guys are real about what real privilege is, everyone just talks about race and never talks about looks, two parent households, and the country privilege is huge.
White privilege is the most connected to white supremey. When Europeans immigrants were even ultra cheap land in America when black Americans were never payed for slavery. Never any 40 acres of land or mule.
I know a lot of people who are book smart but have no common sense, street smarts. If I had to chose- booksmart aint gonna get you as far in life. You can have a masters and be a dumbass...js
Intellectual privilege has never been much of a privilege. I graduated high school thinking I'd be able to be pretty successful because I was smart. I found out really fast employers don't care much about what you can figure out; they care about what you've already done in your work history. The only way intelligence helps is that you can lie and exaggerate about your abilities and figure it out quickly when you start.
I want to add the language(s) you speak! My native language is English and I moved recently to a place where people speak French... it's given me a lot of perspective on how much being able to easily communicate with others around me is something I've taken for granted.
Agreed. They also forgot being tall privilege. Or the having no mental problems privilege. The having a stable social environment privilege goes into the geology and parent privilege, but it would be worth judging separately.
@@germanzazueta402 If you want to drive tanks then no, it is a detriment. If you want to date or go into politics then it is one. At least many women have size requirements and people unconsciously think leaders who are tall are more trustworthy. It's similar to having a deep voice as a man. But I know that it comes with some inconveniences as life is made for average sized people. But would you rather be a foot smaller or a foot bigger than the average person?
I guess languages could be a sub category of "IQ privilege", because you would probably take extra language in school and actually learn it if you are acing your school life. But Being native English speaker from languages is on top because almost every other country can communicate with you.
Isn’t this basically what folks used to call “count your blessings”?!?😳 Folks today compare & complain so much, they only focus on what they don’t have, not what they do.
Social medias make it worse. Human always complaining and whining, it's human nature. However, people's self control skill and mental health indeed get worse in the last decade.
My husband and I were talking about how kids should not have access to social media or internet until late high school. They need to learn how to communicate face to face, not anonymously through the internet. Read books for fun and research; learn how to cite works and do a bibliography. Work and play outside. All things that don't happen much now.
"I would rather be black and able-bodied than white and disabled". I agree. On a side note - I would rather be black AND disabled than be an Able-bodied, 6-foot, athletic, good looking North Korean male living in North Korea.
@@BertSurl so you’re telling me that they were born one gender and didn’t choose to be the other? I’m sorry, if it’s not a choice, then they weren’t trans because the whole thing about being trans is being able to choose your gender. You just debunked all transgenders... your gender is solid and you cannot choose what you want to be.
facts, we can't do shit about racism but we can do something about classism. Call me what you want while you're serving ME lol, actually call me what I say or I'll cost you your little job LOL. There's still ways to win in this world past your race.
Being able bodied will always be the greatest privilege to me. Having all senses and limbs truly is a blessing that I wake up everyday without even having thinking about it. People that have severe disabilities would probably give up all the money on earth just to be a fully functional human.
As a person with chronic pain conditions who has been homebound for 3 years in wretched pain I can testify there is no privilege like being healthy. I have lost jobs, money, people, relationships and it hurt but their was always hope of regeneration and new possibilities but the loss of my health has been my deepest grief because you can't start again, it's game over.
Hey. I'm disabled. I get what you're trying to say but with respect I would like to add somethings. Disabled people are fully functionaI humans!!!!!! Iam glad you are grateful for your abled-body. But disability is a huge more of people identity. Many people with disability would not trade their disability.... With respect please be mindful
@Mike Dalby Hi Mike, Would someone who wears a prosthetic leg not fully functionaI? 🤷 I appreciate the care in the way you approach the topic but you are mislead. You seem to be sensible so I'd encourage to do a bit of research and engaging with disabled people. I won't tell you what to think as your believes seem to be strongly entrench but with all due respect your views are antiquated.
@@iexistsomehow5718 He's saying the truth. I met quite a few selfhating german girls because they are white. Also in Italy women try to have darker skin, because being pale is somehow considered ugly.
Looks, money and being able-bodied are most important. Out of those three, money comes out on top, especially because it can buy you beauty (up to a certain point) as well as medication/medical equipment.
I wouldn't rank IQ as S- Tier. As someone who was in the "gifted and talented" program I realized people who are hardworking usually make it farther in life. Highly intelligent people can be lazy since everything came easy to them growing up. But someone who is intelligent AND hardworking can accomplish anything I would make it A-Tier
I agree with you. But in the doomsday movies where there's a choice in who lives or dies... they always choose the smartypants. But then the smartypants aren't always the most resourceful, get poop done types if you watch things like Naked and Afraid or any of those survive on an island reality shows... the folks who are university educated are usually the ones dragging everyone down. Haha!
Yes, but if you are poor and lazy you will also have bigger problems than poor and working hard. The problem is rather that the majority of success does not come from your achievements, but from the perception of others (e.g. your boss). You can be as intelligent as you want, if people don't perceive you as intelligent because you have the wrong gender, race or whatever, it doesn't matter if you could prove them wrong. They will just ignore the facts.
@@dazedconfuseds I think maybe we would interpret the actions of Schindler differently. I think it was his factory workers he saved, so not necessarily the "smartest" of society. Unless you know something about his life that I could read about that indicates he favoured educated folks? That aside, I could see in some scenarios, the "smart" being conked over the head by a meathead. Educated doesn't necessarily mean streetsmart. Since we're on the movie reference train - that's the movie "Idiocracy"
That's not the point though. In isolation, being intelligent is a huge advantage and opens so many doors in your life. As you said, hardworking + intelligence is better than hardworking. There is also no correlation between laziness and intelligence. Some people just lazy af.
I think their point was that because you are academically gifted you are given more opportunities to get ahead in life. Like I know a lot of people who were gifted academically and were given full ride scholarships to travel and study abroad. But its still up to that person to take those opportunities or not.
Bonus points if it’s both parents. I’m lucky enough to have one whom I love very much back. The other is… well I’m glad they’re alive and well at least.
almost like that should be the gold standard, but idk how some people can advocate for tearing apart family structures when it’s so important for success
Im Native American Indian, an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation in the U.S. and half Black. Just wanted to say we DO pay taxes! On and off the rez. Otherwise, appreciate all the other key points Preach preached 🥰 Historical trauma is REAL!
Not being sexually violated at a very young age and not living with that trauma is an A-tier privilege to me, being assaulted just sucks your soul out of your mind and body.
Basic security and safety is definitely an important thing especially for certain demographics. Many people won't ever understand that. My heart goes out to those that have ever been violated in that way.
@@NawUniqueHandle it should be but in a world where the child is considered a liar and the culprit is actively protected then it becomes a priveldge , a right becomes a priveldge where that right is actively and aggressively taken from individuals and all families do is choose to live in their own blissful ignorance.
Thanks for mentioning the native American privilege. The fact that my daughter is Alaskan native and how many native American women go missing without a word. I'm scared for her. When I hear her great grandma talk about not being allowed to talk in her language as a child and the things that where done to her, makes me cry. ❤️ As she taught my daughter her language, and whispered it because of what happened to her. I asked her why she would whispered and she told me her story, made my heart break.
I'm from Australia is the Native American history a lot like aborignal Australian history. Cause here in Australia, the 'stolen generation' from like 1910s to late 1970s, Native aboriginal famlies would be separated to 'breed out' the aboriginal. I'm not aborignal so i don't really understand it first hand, but just curious if the nations people of america are similar to that of aboringal australians?
As a disabled person who is finding success I would sell it for an abled body. It’s definitely an F tier. I feel so much pain every single day, the costs of surgeries are high, and way people and society view me is sad. I don’t want hate but I also don’t want you pity. I just want to be a normal person.
I definitely feel where your coming from. At the same time I wish the world had more pity for "normal" people. Although it can be misguided at least it's a manifestation of the good that's in people. I feel like there must be an important distinction between those that really care and understand healthy ways to express it and those that are virtue signalling without showing you the proper amount of respect.
This is interesting. I always tell my bf that he's privileged because he has good eye sight, mean while I have to wear glasses, pay for them + exams + if I want contacts + the price for the fitting. It's expensive, he's always shocked at how much I have to pay yearly just to see clearly. And imagine how people who are blind feel about me, sure she wears glasses but that's still better than being blind. We're all privileged in some or a lot of ways, don't forget that. And when you remember those privileges, it just makes you more grateful for what you do have, even if someone has more.
As a lighter skinned physically attractive black woman, I can say my life is S tier. I come from a somewhat affluent back ground thanks to my parents working their asses off, I have always had stability and everything I needed. My life is super easy. My parents afforded me to stay home until I finish grad school, work part time, and live comfortably. Because I look young, people want to take care of me and have more patience with me. My location also plays a big part. The worst things I ever had to worry about is not being black enough, having my sexuality questioned due to not dating, and finding myself in general. I can't really complain.
Sounds like you've had it better then me. I thought black men had it easier or something lol. My parents didn't quite work their asses off and eventually split up so college or grad school wasn't an option. Not complaining though I just think this whole idea of magic privileges granting you everything is hilarious. Money and a stable family seems like the key to a lot more.
@@KillaBryx Well I haven't finished the video but privilege dosen't mean easy mode or that life is automatically easy. A poor white kid that has crack addict parents and struggles to have most meals still has white privilege even though his life might be harder than most people in general. The concept of privilege is real but its very nuanced. Most people don't care to actually understand what racial and gender privileges really mean. Also privileges are most important when one major group in a certain area or country or place utilized their privilege knowingly or unknowingly to subjugate other people in a large meaningful way. Thats why the education about privilege is important but this doesn't mean that a person from the privileged group has a good or easier life.
@@WinterStones Are you done using acronyms that you don't fully understand? This is common sense and has nothing to do with any current theories. Ever since the beginning of time some are up and some are down and race, tribe and creed divide us. If you want to help make yourself aware of any inequalities in society then do so if not stay online typing up alphabet soup in the form of nonsense questions. 🤣🤣
Am I the only one who is in love with their conversation??? Like I like how they listen to the each other and understand what the other person is saying without getting mad or anything. I LOVE IT!!
Or even just average intelligence. Being smart is great but if you are lazy you might not do too much with it but being incredibly low intelligence is still going to be SO much harder than someone who is average.
You could also consider that an intelligent person that is well intentioned will often have more burdens and difficulty fitting in or even finding contentment in life surrounded by disorder and irrationality. But then you have the intelligent that use it without a sense of responsibility or care for the bigger picture. I just think being kinda smart in some stuff can be a lot of trouble if you're still an idiot with how you use it or how others treat you because of it. Most intelligent people die for being different or disappear silently into history never making a difference beyond a few close to them if they are lucky.
Another thing I've found interesting is a lot of "geniuses" throughout history, and this is in many subjects, are often prone to depression. It plays into the who crazy genius thing as well. I still think being smart is an amazing privilege, but it's interesting to see the draw backs.
@@Kaunedhiel well, a quote from a famous historical person whose name I forgot is that smart people think of all the consequences while those not as smart are more ignorant. Ignorance is bliss. Our dynamic is changing. Before you didn’t need to be smart, just really, really strong. But that was in the past. Now being smart matters, but we kinda over emphasize it while demonizing being strong, unless you’re attractive.
Being higher iq you also see problems that others will not see, or also they may see problems but you will see the picture more clearly. in a way it gives you more problems more worries to think about, more responsibility to try and fix things than the below average iq
On the able/disabled point: I'm able, but I tore my ACL recently - so I had a wheelchair, etc... Bruh - I will never take my legs for granted again and I *respect* disabled people even harder. Especially since my shower is on the second floor of my place....it was rough...so i don't even wanna imagine what they deal with daily. God bless em all.
Same here, tore my ACL in the 5th grade. I was bed bound for 6 weeks and had to use crutches. Showering and using the bathroom were beyond difficult. I am so grateful I am well but looking back on it, I can’t imagine what it would be like waking up that way everyday for the rest of my life. My heart goes out to them.
I agree. But I just want to say that the first few months are different than if you spend your entire live like that. For example you wouldn't put the shower in the second floor if you were permanently disabled. And some things get easier when done a lot of times.
Bizarre thing about lightskinned privilege, I get it's often the reverse in non-white families, but in white families from what I've seen you get frowned at and you get comments if you're too pale. The pre-millennial generations in particular really seem to admire the tanned look. Not saying you should change the ranking based on that, but I think it's an interesting phenomenon 😅
It used to be that paler was better, because if you were wealthy you could stay inside all day, and show off your pale skin. Then suddenly people could take holidays in exotic locations and come back with tans to show off their wealth instead (and i guess different workers work inside so...). There was even a trend were people would lay in the sun and get completely sunburned, lobster red and painful, and only then pun on creme, because they thought it would optimize the tanning process. Sort of similar to how it used to be more attractive to be slightly pudgy than super thin, because then you had money to eat.
Being light skinned is bad in prison your too dark for white people and too light for dark people. Man they done called me el de barge , high yellow etc. my white dad cut my hair off because he said my hairs nappy
@Robert Burger Dude. I’m a leftist and I realize that everyone has privileges and disadvantages. You’d be hard pressed to find someone with every privilege you can think of. And sir. There’s a whole ass right wing where majority of those people think privilege is fake, just “WoRk HaRdEr”
@Robert Burger I’m a lefty and what I’ve seen is people to the right will latch one a word or concept in a statement or movement without nuance and then call you a commie, socialist or terrorist. Typically.
@Robert Burger lol non-whiteness you mean you married a person of color? The radical lefties I’ve seen btw have been more so the moderate/corporate ones spouting identity politics 24/7 while the lefties labeled as “radical leftists” just want universal education, healthcare, housing and a federal jobs guarantee, it’s sad really
I grew up in a trailer park in the United States, and now I live in Costa Rica as an adult. I can say from experience that being trailer trash in the United States I had a much higher quality of life than most middle-class Costa Ricans. I normally don't pay much attention to the concept of privilege, but I know from experience that there is no greater privilege than being born in a country with good infrastructure.
@@jamesmichaels3848 100% my dad travelled across south and southeast Asia and the pics he took made me glad that even if I'm poor I'm glad I live in the us. I don't have to worry about my water being clean or illnesses. Food is well regulated and don't have to worry about crazy bacteria and other shit in food cause here all that shit is properly processed. I mean we have constant electricity. Some people don't realize how much good shit we got.
Does the infrastructure stop you having COVID? Does the infrastructure help you live longer? Does the infrastructure protect your children from p dough files?
Food also affects your IQ and temperament as well. Basically having access to good food alone can affect how well you do in school, how you carry yourself and of course your health.
I love how when they disagree they don't argue and try their best to understand each other I feel like that is rare and everything they say is so respectable and how they respond is so respectful
Yeah if someone like epstein can dissappear without anyone involved getting arrested (many known and famous people) yu know shits fucked up then and now...
Homie said you can be disabled and be living your best lives and I thought of my dad (been in a wheelchair for the past 19 years) who my family out of the gutters, bought 4 houses, got his masters, his PhD, and I working on his 2nd PhD rn. I got mad respect for that nigga no cap. Still my crip though but he’s living his best life 🙏🏽🔥 love you dad
This comment made me so happy you don't even know. I've got some medical problems that will lead me to being in a wheelchair later and I am terrified of raising children as a disabled father. Hearing how proud you are of your father despite his difficulties gives me hope that I can be a good father in the future despite mine. Edit: typo
@@joe_mama_ I forgot to mention that at hr time my dad got into an accident (when he lost his ability to walk and use his hands properly) him and my mom were swimming in hospital bill debt and he lost his job as it was a contract job and he spent 3 mo the in hospital. My mom was working a minimum wage job and I was still a baby so I didn’t make anything any better, we basically vouch surfed for years. We also rented at a few places for some years. We lived pretty hard in very small places, in places with no ramps and tons of stairs. My dad bought his first house in 2012 and in 2014 my mom lost her job and my dad became the primary source of income. Saying it was more money privileged is a bit of a misleading thing because we didn’t have any money. No one in our family really helped. My dad just trusted in his education and got himself jobs and worked his way up to the position he’s in.
Great content! It was really interesting and fun to hear your perspectives. Personally I would put IQ privilege in maybe A tier. I feel people with high IQs are not always seen or taken into account but that's just me
Thank You Preach. My mother was one of the kids taken from a reserve and put into the schools. The family went and took her back along with her sisters and brothers. That school fucked her up so bad. In turn I suffered as a child from her emotional and mental damage from those schools. I seen my mother drunk and passed out on the stairs and other things Id rather not share. Because she was in that state it flowed down to me. Welfare, I've eaten out of grange cans because she spent the money on booze or one of her many boyfriends. Foster home, hand me downs, stealing, fighting ...anything I needed to stay alive with food in my belly. My grandmother told me one of her drunken boyfriends beat me so bad I ended up at emerg. Thankfully I don't remember anything of that. Even though I am functional as an adult there is deep psychological scars/damage. Prime example. Interpersonal relations. I have ZERO trust that anyone has my best interest at heart. Food anxiety. I have lots of food to eat now. But when my cupboards get to certain level and I start reverting back to that survival mode, the panic of "where is my next meal?" creeps into my mind. Some people the residential schools weren't a big deal. But they were. They were hell bent on CULTURAL GENOCICE. There is even slight evidence that medical experimentation was possibly happening at the schools. Preach was right in saying. The children were treat like prisoners' of war. And the kids that came from those parents are damaged too.
I’m so surprised to hear this cause in my experience everyone is always focused on what the USA did to Native Americans and praising Canada for what they did. Although i don’t know if this happened in the USA too… but I’m so sorry that had to happen to you, I hope you can find peace and happiness now though
i am so sorry that your mother went through all that, I can only imagine the frustration you felt at not being able to do anything about it and hope you are doing better now. It always frustrates me how so little is mentioned about natives and how the government shoves it under the rug. I cried reading this comment because nobody should go through all of that. I wish you the best and I'm glad things are looking better for you.
You know what a trailer that is clean, well kept and decorated is not a bad thing. Now days it is considered a tiny home. I raised my children in a trailer so I could be a stay at home mom and homeschool them. We lived on 24-28 k a year from the time I had my first kid which started in 1993. We bought a brand new 1992 trailer that I slowly redid the inside even with wood floors. I plastered the walls and kept it spotless. My kids had a yard that was landscaped nicely and we had food, clothes and lots of toys. It was a choice that ai do not regret.
There's some pretty amazing disabled people out there. As a disabled Army vet, I'm going to name a few of my brothers in arms as examples. Chad Jukes (RA) and Thomas Linville (USMC) are both amputees that climbed the summit of Mt. Everest. Travis Mills (RA) is a quadruple amputee that has a foundation and retreat in Maine that helps other veterans and their families adapt their lives to the emotional and/or physical trauma soldiers sustain during service.
There were whites living in North America BEFOE the so-called natives arrived and killed off all the whites. So the land in North America was stolen first form the whites!!! So stop with the "natives" meaning Indians shit. The whites are the natives.
@@pduffy421 lmao 😂😂😂😂, sure dude 🙄 what's your sources? Where do you get that dumb ass Info from? Lmao. This is the funniest shit I've seen in a LONG time 😂😂
I relate to the geographic privilege soo much growing up in africa having corrupt gouvernment , needing a visa to travel almost anywhere and not getting it since you're a male , the education ..etc so seeing Americans complain and fight about the most insignificant stuff really can be annoying at times
It drives me nuts when other Americans act like they aren't privileged to live in the U.S. and act as though this is the worst country to live in. Not saying America doesn't have it's problems but it is definitely one of the best countries to live in. In my opinion it's the best.
@@TheLastEgg08 the issue with free healthcare is that, sure it’s free, but you get a lesser quality of care. I have a pre-existing condition called hemophilia. My medication NOW is a few thousand dollars. My medication under free health care could be a lot more expensive, to damn near unobtainable from my financial standing. I wouldn’t get the best care should I be hospitalized, and I need a specialized team to conduct that care.
I was talking to a buddy of mine from Nepal about this once. He's heavily left leaning, but he gets pissed when people talk about how "victimized" they are and how they're being oppressed. He had family killed when China invaded Nepal, which is why they left. His family knows what it's like to actually be oppressed.
At first I was like “okay here we go” but after preach talked about the hardships of the indigenous people and the effects of residential schools, really made me appreciate you guys. My blood relatives were part of the 60s scoop and my kokum (grandma) suffered in residential schools. Hearing the amount of kids found at church’s has fuelled a rage in me that has effected my life for worse. But I try to honour my culture and better my life to honour those kids who couldn’t live theirs. Rest In Peace children. You deserved so much better 😢
As an Australian Aboriginal i had no idea they did that so recently in Canada. Unfortunately Australia did that to my people to up till the 70s. My grandparents were taken from their families as children and they tried to marry them off to white people to "breed the savage out". What people don't understand is that it affects the future generations like us as well. Stay strong brother and best of luck.
@Eat the socialist lol you’re just full of hot takes. Telling somebody whose grandparents’ generation were kidnapped and killed that they’re better off this way…
It's really interesting to see everyone's take, and how things change from person to person. For me being a white dude from a poor family in Eastern Europe sucks ass. Sure if strictly talking about Eastern Europe, dark skin, being a woman, being not straight are disadvantages. But as soon as i move to west, that changes. My personal experience, went to England to study, racked debt, had to work my ass off during uni so i can afford to live. Couldn't get a *free maintaince loan cuz i wasn't a citizen. My parents didn't have money to help. And then gender and skin colour. I remember vividly being told that I'm lucky i am white and have a lot of privilege. And i just couldn't understand how that worked. There were programs to help minorities with money or counsel. Not me. I have been rejected from jobs/internships because i was white and they had to fill their quote of diversity. When I finally got a job with a garbage piece of shit supervisor being a man bit me in the ass. Compared to my female counterparts, i was being told to stay late, being harshly criticised for small mistakes and always sent to do more physical stuff ( hanging something, bring shit from storage etc). So as much as I would want to rank things different, i can't just because my personal experience. What really fucking sucks is being told that I'm privileged when I was struggling with debt and putting food on the table. That shit made me so resentful towards a lot of people. But eh now I'm like whatever, call me what you want, i know my struggles
Same man. Southeastern European here...went through living hell to make it in the west. Eastern Europeaneans are considered as a lower class white people.
Yes! Yes yes yes! Finally someone else talked about it. I have almost exactly the same experience as you, also from Eastern Europe and moved to the U.K. I cannot even explain how much racism I've faced from black and Asian people every single day of my life in the U.K. How privileged they all were, always getting away with stuff and be given free opportunities just because of the colour of their skin. We come from the worst part of the world for white people. We were oppressed for much longer than black people were and yet we, white people, are somehow superior to them? Truth is, nobody cares or even wants to know how hard white people have it, because we're the first child of the family that always has to keep their mouth shut. That's life I guess.
@@seyniole1898 I think they're funnier together and I'd doubt I'd watch them individually. It's the classic funny/straight man routine and they switch roles seamlessly back and forth.
Man I’m part Native American, and I know my grandpa’s parents left the reservation at an early age and now I’m wondering what they went through… and how my grandpa was raised, cause he looks (his skin is olive but I always thought it was a tan cause he’s outside a lot) and acts ‘white’ and doesn’t have many Native American items or traditions. I do know my great great great grandma walked the trail of tears as a kid too
@@mrlofi333 tell that to the freed men and the black plantation owners. Play writes, lawyers, judges etc. Or the blacks who fought on the side of the confederacy, not forced. Most were farmers who OWNED land. Who were being taxed out the wazoo on the behest of the industries of the north. If you mean Jim crow and redlining and all that those laws didnt target black people they targeted the poor and were used by racist people to keep black people down. But these laws and practices were repealed and shunned 70ish years ago. The native people to this day do not have the same rights as other citizens in america and canada. Btw... black plantation owners own native slaves too.
Not too long ago in Ireland being born out of wedlock or losing your parents ended up like the way Preach talked about native children. There have also been mass graves found, children sexually assaulted etc. 😧
Watching this, it's very clear they are Canadian and not American. They are considering things from an international perspective, "I'd rather be rich in a poor country" or passport privileges, etc. Americans usually only consider privilliges within America and can't conceive of what life is like in other countries unless they are the type who travel. Just something I've noticed about Americans in general, not all Americans are like this but usually the rest of the world doesn't really factor into their thinking.
They are not only Canadian, but I believe both are immigrants thrmselves, not just the children of immigrants. Even if they had immigrated to America, that would give them global perspective. But you are correct. We are very insular.
Eat the socialist Bro, Americans in general regardless of political leaning are closed minded and self centered and have little knowledge of the outside world. The farther you go down south the more ignorant worldwise. I've never seen a group of people who's entire existence is based on articles and news. They have opinions on entire countries and people from there when they haven't left their front porch let alone their state or country. Traveling to Americans is the Caribbean or basic tourism.
Passport privilege is understated tbh, you can have a lot of the other S Tier privileges but if you’re born in a country with little to no opportunities, you are barely able to leverage the other privileges
These things you said about Brazil, I felt compelled to point few things. First thing: we have no restrictions with black people on television, quite the contrary, we have prime-time journalism presenters who are black. Second: Most people from "samba" schools are black, and maybe you're saying about drum queens being white, well it's actually a mix, sometimes black, sometimes white, it depends on who the samba school (whose board is mostly black) chooses to represent, and they are always famous people. As for food, I've seen a lot of reaction videos of Americans eating our sweets and foods, it's just too far from your industrialized diet, it's the equivalent of asking an herbivore to eat meat. What matters is that our cuisine is by far one of the most nutritious and healthy in the world, thanks to our African origins. [Sorry, i translated in google translate]
@@estevanmartins5319 How is he privileged if he said the truth, but we dont have restrictions, black people always been on Tv, its fucking Brazil, our two biggest movies involved either A black protagonist ( Cidade de Deus) or some very good black actor in a important role. The thing about Aba saying that brazilians lost their shit when a dark skinned lady won the samba thing is a straight up lie, most of them are already black, and in my 20 years i never seen one person batting and eye because of a black person on TV, and i live in the """"most racist"""" state
This is a great idea. No matter how you fill this chart it makes you think. Being a Native American in my area is pretty cool, however, being a Native American in some areas of the country is really depressing. Having the opportunity to get to a better place can be everything. Being stuck in North Korea with no way out could mean slow-motion death. We are sooooo... lucky you actually have people picking low-paying college majors and still having a decent life. This would be beyond irresponsible in most places. I personally would put many more groups in the middle tiers.
Yes, please do the food tier! Hahahaha However.......barbecue is not Brazil's main dish. Meat is pretty pricy in Brazil. That's like saying that wagyu beef is what Japanese people are known for. Our main dishes are things that everyday people can afford and what can be found locally. SInce Brazil is huge, each region has its own particularities. If you find a Brazilian that tells you he is gonna introduce you to Brazilian food and take you to a barbecue place, that person is privileged hahahaha. Most Brazilians will show you Brigadeiro, Pão de Queijo, Feijão, Moqueca.... North: ingredients from the Amazon (Tacacá, Tucupi, Maniçoba). Heavy influence from the native Brazilians. Northeast: maybe the most diverse, a mix of seafood, cassava dishes, tapioca, jerk beef, couscous and vegetables. Heavily influenced by our African and Native Brazilian heritage. Southeast: here we have São Paulo, Rio, MInas Gerais and Espirito Santo. Rio only has Feijoada. Period. Minas Gerais probably has the best food in Brazil, and its main characteristic is using simple ingredients to create amazing flavors (Pão de queijo, Vaca atolada, Feijão Tropeiro). São Paulo is the place to find food from all over the world. Mostly Japanese, Italian and Arab (fun fact: the main fast food chain restaurant in São Paulo is called habibs.....and they serve mostly arab pastries like Kibeh and Sfiha). Espirito Santo has tones of seafood dishes, including the famous Moqueca. South: Barbecue. Period.
Resumiu sul a churrasco KKKKKKKKKKKK, tu deve ta viajando e muito pra falar uma merda dessas, os paulista tem comida italiana e os cara do sul n? literalmente tem porra de colonia e cidades no sul que os cara falam alemão/italiano e portugues, São Paulo se resume a Nova York BR, zero culinaria propria e sim culinaria dos outros que chegam ali e começam um negocio, e fast food ruim q nem habibs
The exact quote was "to kill the indian in the child" I was lucky that my dad didn't have to go to a residential school and have the baggage from that because my great grandfather fought in both world wars and had to renounce his mètis status we only recently rediscovered are roots
reading more into these residential schools, its scary seeing the similarities of what my grandfather went through in the church schools in ireland, or the womens nun schools here too(really nasty stuff).
@@jamescanjuggle As a black man i always respect the irish because they experienced the same wrath we did from the british empire. When i do see brits in any of the islands though lol always fireworks, let's just say that. For the ancestors lol
My Metis grandparents did go to residential school and were very successful people. My grandfather was a post master in Duck lake Saskatchewan and was a war veteran. My grandmother was a successful manager. Yet due to their success they were shunned and ostrisized by their own people. While we point out the clean water issue, we can also point out natives within their own communities don't educate themselves on water purification technologies. First Nations put no effort into solving these issues but wait for Canadians to solve the clean water issues for them. Taxpayers have funded billions to try to solve this issue. Traditions are great and help us learn about history, but being stuck in the past will mean the is no future.
@@calvinstrom8862 Couldn't agree more, some cultures just never want to move forward. The ones that do, are shunned, vilified and ostracized by their own community.
@@rockysalvatore435 It does, but every lefty becomes a republican after taxes. Look at the Bernie beo Neokuul, she yammerd on how rich people need to be taxed more. Then she became wealthy and the first place she moved was Texas (no state tax) and bought a 2 million dollar apartment
I'm teary eyed listening to the treatment of native kids 😪 it's so unacceptable. How can people say they believe in God and treat other humans like that
I REALLY appreciate this video. EVERYONE has some sort of privilege....P E R I O D. If you disagree chances are you're DEEP into this new "victimhood" culture and I have nothing to say to or for you.
Yep. Wallowing in victimhood is one of the easiest ways to kill your motivation in life. Instead of taking responsibility, victims expect others to change their circumstances for them.
Good looks privilege is an obvious S tier. Everybody is prone to liking you more and you get your way with things a lot easier. Job applications, relationships, etc. Especially if ur a woman, you can take advantage of how downbad men are and make easy bank. Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk.
Financial privilege should have its own tier, like before anything else. The very "recruitment tier list" don't even apply to those who have financial privileges.
In general yeah it's #1. But even more accurate is to split it up into different types, like 'financially secure' [S tier] and 'rich' [SS+ tier], because those are drastically different levels of privilege. If you're just financially secure, then yeah you don't have to worry about money which is huge, but if you're rich then you have influence, and that's a whole different ballgame then.
Tell that to the trans’ woman who comes from the Alphabet Mafia. The abuse/ online insults/smashed the back door with no pay/ beaten up by their fellow men. The list is endless! You’re telling me they don’t matter?
IQ privilege didn't seem to matter much. Then I realized my struggles were from being ugly and broke. Doing well in my life is solely because of having a high IQ, it changes lives realizing ways to grind up in the world. This tier list is damn solid.. Could you leave some logical fallacies next time? The current list is hard to argue with...
You don’t get as far professionally if you sink a lot of time into your appearance. Smart people have realized they can leverage their strengths more effectively with their mind.
I love your videos, I agree with a lot of your opinions. I was stunned when you guys mentioned the fact that in Brazil Afro-Brazilians are not allowed on television. I am Brazilian myself and I grew up watching some of my favourite black Brazilian artists and actors. Like Cris vianna, Olivia Duarte, Juliana Alves and actors Lazaro Ramos, singer and actor seu jorge (my personal favourite), rafael zulo. Many more actors that are celebrated in Brazil for there artistry. Samba is Afro-Brazilian and samba schools have a predominantly Afro-Brazilian presence. There have been countless samba queens that are black. But I am sure you guys weren’t making things up, correct me if I am wrong guys.
Idk, someone probably told them a lie or exagerration, because Pele and Mussum where on TV during the black and white times of television in here, and we grew up seeing a lot of black acotrs and singers on TV. Me parece uma puta mentira do krl oq eles falaram ali, KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK brasil né estados unidos n
I think one way I can say I disagree is often they look at the privilege and what positive aspect comes with it but they barely mention what negative aspect come with it. Most of them are double edged sword, the only one that doesn't have a negative side effect is having all your body parts ... Even being rich can have a terrible affect, usually rich people that do suicide is because of the affect it has on their relationship with other human being or how they feel lonely, or it could even be the lack of having something to look forward to(Goals). I'd say most of their ranking were fine by itself but it's a dangerous topic to look at without acknowledging the downfall of each of them.
@@256alexdt then they have to dig down deeper and explore whether the positives outweigh the negatives. Most of their higher privilege rankings tend to fall into that criteria For example being attractive might come with negatives such as trust issues, fake friends, jealously and self esteem issues. But even with all those considered, the positives that come with it far make up for it
For the boarding schools for Natives, there are so many elders that have stories. It's really sad. Children are sacred. They took so many sacred things from our people. Since I wasn't raised on the reserve, I can't fully perceive the pain that others felt. I'm privileged not to have grown up on the reserve. I was so upset to see it dwindling away, but our tribe was finally allowed to be independent! And now, we are starting to rebuild.
Two parent household is S tier, one of the biggest predictors of success even with data that includes households with what would be considered shitty parents
inb4 Butthurt Comments. We'll do a Part 2 with Ethnic food or more privileges if this video is something yall dig. Hit dat like
yee
Love y'all
I got my 🍿
*incoming angy replies xD
Injera bread is definitely S tier
Location matters too. Being gay in the US is easier than being gay in the Middle East. Same thing with being a woman in the US vs poorer countries.
They addressed that at the end. Basically all the issues are in the context of the west
@@DarthRane113 I thought it was a universal point of view at first, that makes sense
@@lauramenendez3212 yeah because absolutely geographical location easily changes the tier of some of these.
Weird how the western SJW's seem to think they have it bad
@@randomwatcher2848 people can have it bad while others have it worse. I don't understand why people can never get this. Imagine if we looked at every problem like, "Oh someone has it far worse so your problem doesn't/shouldn't matter." Someone/something can always be worse than you.
As a bald man, I'm offended there's not a "hair" privilege.
you're right , they forgot that one
Lol
I always went bald in the summer if the heat gets out of line, the way people treat you just for shaving your head is DISGUSTING!
As a short man I'm offended theres not a "tall" privilege, I'd love to see where they put that on the tier list
Try being a bald (alopecian) woman. It's waaay tougher. Speaking from experience.
Having a stable family is S tier.
The shitty amount of problems that comes with divorces. Abusive parents.
The ability to trust someone.
Bruhh!! Say it again!!!
Yess
Sometimes people aren’t aware or just don’t appreciate that they were born in a great family. It seems boring and monotonous, so they seek thrills in what dysfunctional people would consider escapism. The only difference is they have the ability to return to a stable environment.
Despite this, the delusion that “true love/happiness” could be ever be found in a cesspool can become so strong that it begins they dysfunctional cycle of abuse all over again. The person gets hurt, never gets over it, takes it out on the kid so on and so forth
This is not said often enough. Having a stable loving family is a privilege I feel like the majority of us did not experience and the repercussion last for the rest of your life.
We shouldn't normalize unstable families though. Stable family should be normal tier while unstable family should be hard mode.
As a disabled person I totally agree with where we at on the list, yeah i'm playing the game of life in hard mode but that makes it that bit sweeter when you obtain your goals
Yes. We play life on LEGENDARY SURVIVAL MODE! 😥
Amen.
Wow. This is the perfect outlook on life. I love you and your way of thinking man. God bless you.
this made me smile...i 100% relate. even going outside somedays makes me smile much more than the people taking care of me
YOOOOOO hahahaha "I went from Democrat to Republican in one pay check" I was crying hahaha
This reminds me of that black lady that was in trump's election night video. In so many words she said the same thing. Just bc they had more money her family's values changed, so they changed to Republican...
Yeah that’s why modern republicans suck they don’t even pass tax cuts for the middle class anymore
@@Prplflwr well it's the idea that you want to horde as much money and influence for yourself and your children... This ideal LEADS to corruption and dictatorships. The sad part is if your a minority all that it buys you ultimately is time. When they get done with all the poorer people if you ain't next to the big man you're next.
@@lpk6372 Having a choice on how you use your wealth doesn’t breed corruption, you only do it to yourself, there are plenty of wealthy people with good hearts and helping the communities around them without government intervention.
Fr tho. I’m democrat until I see those tax %s.
"You may be a white person that grew up in a trailer."
Feeling called out right now bro.
🤣
@Corporal Feel no way nigga stfu lmao
@Corporal Feel no way stupid and close minded argument
@@xkamo1976 hey like Dave Chappelle said, I don't feel bad for poor whites, because y'all feel it shouldn't be happening to you lol
@Corporal Feel no way If you're American and can't make it that says more about you. No matter what skin color you have.
I'd much rather watch you guys talking about privilege than those TH-camrs using corny academic words and saying 'problematic' every 2 seconds
So basically ppl on Twitter and social media in general 🤣
I hate the fking word son “problematic “ who tf came up with that’s word
@@Rieky22 have you ever listened to their points? Why are you so bothered?
Bro clam down it's just a comedy video 😂. Nothing serious Lay Ton lol
Why does TH-cam keep unsubscribing me from your channel my dude?
Layton, do they have something against you?
You guys influence a whole bunch of emotions.
I hate your opinions, then
I love your opinions
I’m sad about your opinions, then
I’m angry at your opinions
This was possibly your best and most honest video I’ve seen from you.
Thanks guys!
Which opinions you angry about?
Same. I like them, I like some things they said, and laughed at some other things they said. Never got angry tho, not worth it getting angry on the internet.
being able-minded and bodied, financial privilege, & not being sexually or physically abused are the best privileges
Agreed!!
So with all of that you mean a unicorn?
@@hainleysimpson1507 ..what?
@@hainleysimpson1507 lol yes basically
As a person who has gone through some messed up things I kinda disagree with the whole abuse thing. While it's crippling, yes, once you have been/ through enough you gain strength through numbness. You learn to harden yourself in preparation for a much bigger storm.
"Money isn't everything!" No, but it gives you access to everything.
i cant rember the comedian but i was watching a comedian and he was talking bout idiots that say money isnt every thing he was like u go to pick up ur check on friday ur happy right ur boss dosnt have ur check see how happy u are
Money doesn't always make you happy but not having enough money sure can make you miserable.
@@goodlookinouthomie1757 money is a amplifier it just makes what u have in side more clear the difrence is knowing why ur earning money if ur earning for the sake of earning it wont ever be enought but if ur got goals then you will know when to settle
Money buys POLITICAL POWER... which gets you more money...
IQ is in big part environnementally influened and a little part by your genetics, if you're parents had high IQ there is high change you will inherit that if your parents stimulate you brain at a early age, so I'd say people with a higher amount of money are advantaged because they can pay for high tier tutors, high tier education, etc.. So to me the IQ privilege should be mixed in with the money privilege.
Money isn't everything... but i'd rather cry in a Ferrari
You’d be crying because a Ferrari is an overpriced, unreliable heap
I'd rather a big house to cry in
“Money can’t buy happiness, but it sure can fucking rent it!” Not sure who said this, but it’s always stuck in my head.
@@numbskull3965 "Money can't buy happiness but it sure can add to it and knock off some stress."- Jarad Higgins
Lol
Not being homeless privilege. Homeless people are looked at as the bottom of the bottom.
A homeless man is hella below
Yeah... Very good point!
That’s not a privilege, you don’t earn things because you’re privileged. You work for them
@@dontbother9473 met plenty of people who worked 40+ hour weeks and were homeless. It's not that simple
@@dontbother9473 Tell that to the housing crisis buddy. Let me know when I can work 60 hours/week getting paid *above minimum-wage* , and still be able to afford a one-room apartment without needing 2 roommates, working the same times as I do, who sleep on the couch and an air-mattress.
And that's considered a *privilege* ?
Before I watch I’d say the biggest privileges are being attractive, born into wealth (so most upper/middle class westerners), and being born with a good support system in place (stable household, present parents, etc.)
I agree I'd say wealth and having living caring parents are some of the biggest privilages the amount of times I've seen well off parents bail there kid out of trouble involving money like rent or money for school yeah those kids get a kick ass life and basically a free ride financially for decades.
So true, I just realized the privilege of having a supportive family, especially for a girl born in the middle east where traditions decide everything for you. It made the other unprivileges I have seem small.
Of course.
Agreed
Yep
I like how you guys are real about what real privilege is, everyone just talks about race and never talks about looks, two parent households, and the country privilege is huge.
Correction: left wing Americans talk about nothing but race and think that that being white is the greatest privilege when it most definitely is not
White privilege is the most connected to white supremey. When Europeans immigrants were even ultra cheap land in America when black Americans were never payed for slavery. Never any 40 acres of land or mule.
@@mrlofi333 yawn.
Exactly
Yessirr
Intellectual privilege has taken a big hit in the last 4 or 5 years.
I would still take being smart then dumb...
My exact thoughts!
@Robert Burger being a cis white male makes your problems irrelevant to society in the eyes of some
I know a lot of people who are book smart but have no common sense, street smarts. If I had to chose- booksmart aint gonna get you as far in life. You can have a masters and be a dumbass...js
Intellectual privilege has never been much of a privilege. I graduated high school thinking I'd be able to be pretty successful because I was smart. I found out really fast employers don't care much about what you can figure out; they care about what you've already done in your work history. The only way intelligence helps is that you can lie and exaggerate about your abilities and figure it out quickly when you start.
I want to add the language(s) you speak! My native language is English and I moved recently to a place where people speak French... it's given me a lot of perspective on how much being able to easily communicate with others around me is something I've taken for granted.
Agreed. They also forgot being tall privilege. Or the having no mental problems privilege. The having a stable social environment privilege goes into the geology and parent privilege, but it would be worth judging separately.
@@germanzazueta402 If you want to drive tanks then no, it is a detriment. If you want to date or go into politics then it is one. At least many women have size requirements and people unconsciously think leaders who are tall are more trustworthy. It's similar to having a deep voice as a man. But I know that it comes with some inconveniences as life is made for average sized people. But would you rather be a foot smaller or a foot bigger than the average person?
I guess languages could be a sub category of "IQ privilege", because you would probably take extra language in school and actually learn it if you are acing your school life. But Being native English speaker from languages is on top because almost every other country can communicate with you.
Isn’t this basically what folks used to call “count your blessings”?!?😳
Folks today compare & complain so much, they only focus on what they don’t have, not what they do.
Social medias make it worse. Human always complaining and whining, it's human nature. However, people's self control skill and mental health indeed get worse in the last decade.
@@aubreysong I couldn’t agree more. Social media is cancer.
Very true. I do this all the time and I'm really trying not to.
it’s called depression and anxiety (;
My husband and I were talking about how kids should not have access to social media or internet until late high school. They need to learn how to communicate face to face, not anonymously through the internet. Read books for fun and research; learn how to cite works and do a bibliography. Work and play outside. All things that don't happen much now.
"I would rather be black and able-bodied than white and disabled". I agree. On a side note - I would rather be black AND disabled than be an Able-bodied, 6-foot, athletic, good looking North Korean male living in North Korea.
That last one sent me 🤣
Bwahaha 😭😂😂
Lol
Idk man, I rather be the latter
Have you been to North Korea? 👀
"if I could choose between being black or trans, I'd choose black." People that are both 😭
That is why I was surprised trans was above being black like yall literally said it is worse lol
@@leoali1661 they had like 2 trans things like the symbol and then the flag I think. I think and 1 was at the bottom and The other is at the top.
People that are both have always been black but they had a choice in thinking their trans or not.
@@trustnschatz596 not a choice.
@@BertSurl so you’re telling me that they were born one gender and didn’t choose to be the other? I’m sorry, if it’s not a choice, then they weren’t trans because the whole thing about being trans is being able to choose your gender. You just debunked all transgenders... your gender is solid and you cannot choose what you want to be.
"I'm already a handsome black man."
Yes. Yes you are.
If you got money, you're privileged no matter what race or gender.
Money is the source of all privilege
facts, we can't do shit about racism but we can do something about classism. Call me what you want while you're serving ME lol, actually call me what I say or I'll cost you your little job LOL. There's still ways to win in this world past your race.
@@jaredramey488 I'm white as hell and I havent gotten far because of myself lol
Fukkin------->A!!
You either are broke or rich?
Being able bodied will always be the greatest privilege to me. Having all senses and limbs truly is a blessing that I wake up everyday without even having thinking about it. People that have severe disabilities would probably give up all the money on earth just to be a fully functional human.
Completely agree, my body isn't as great as it used to be. But I'm grateful it still works well enough for me to get by.
@Mike Dalby I consider it a privilege because you can't choose to have it and because any day it could be taken away from you.
As a person with chronic pain conditions who has been homebound for 3 years in wretched pain I can testify there is no privilege like being healthy. I have lost jobs, money, people, relationships and it hurt but their was always hope of regeneration and new possibilities but the loss of my health has been my deepest grief because you can't start again, it's game over.
Hey. I'm disabled. I get what you're trying to say but with respect I would like to add somethings. Disabled people are fully functionaI humans!!!!!! Iam glad you are grateful for your abled-body. But disability is a huge more of people identity. Many people with disability would not trade their disability.... With respect please be mindful
@Mike Dalby Hi Mike,
Would someone who wears a prosthetic leg not fully functionaI? 🤷
I appreciate the care in the way you approach the topic but you are mislead. You seem to be sensible so I'd encourage to do a bit of research and engaging with disabled people. I won't tell you what to think as your believes seem to be strongly entrench but with all due respect your views are antiquated.
The lightskin thing is real for women in the black community. I have heard ladies talk about it.
Same in Asia and Latin America
@JAY stop lying
@@iexistsomehow5718 He's saying the truth. I met quite a few selfhating german girls because they are white.
Also in Italy women try to have darker skin, because being pale is somehow considered ugly.
@@hydraxon6940 It's a thing all over Europe
Me in east Africa
Looks, money and being able-bodied are most important. Out of those three, money comes out on top, especially because it can buy you beauty (up to a certain point) as well as medication/medical equipment.
Also where you were born, pretty close with money as it affects so much of your standard of life
most people that tried to buy beauty ended up looking like a freak lol
@@bertrandronge9019 If you're a very wealthy ugly man, congratulations you are attractive (to the wrong type of women) but attractive nonetheless. 😂
@@TheSwayzeTrain I was more talking about the surgery fails lol
Growing up with two parents is a privilege
I wouldn't rank IQ as S- Tier. As someone who was in the "gifted and talented" program I realized people who are hardworking usually make it farther in life. Highly intelligent people can be lazy since everything came easy to them growing up. But someone who is intelligent AND hardworking can accomplish anything I would make it A-Tier
I agree with you. But in the doomsday movies where there's a choice in who lives or dies... they always choose the smartypants. But then the smartypants aren't always the most resourceful, get poop done types if you watch things like Naked and Afraid or any of those survive on an island reality shows... the folks who are university educated are usually the ones dragging everyone down. Haha!
Yes, but if you are poor and lazy you will also have bigger problems than poor and working hard.
The problem is rather that the majority of success does not come from your achievements, but from the perception of others (e.g. your boss). You can be as intelligent as you want, if people don't perceive you as intelligent because you have the wrong gender, race or whatever, it doesn't matter if you could prove them wrong. They will just ignore the facts.
@@dazedconfuseds I think maybe we would interpret the actions of Schindler differently. I think it was his factory workers he saved, so not necessarily the "smartest" of society. Unless you know something about his life that I could read about that indicates he favoured educated folks?
That aside, I could see in some scenarios, the "smart" being conked over the head by a meathead. Educated doesn't necessarily mean streetsmart. Since we're on the movie reference train - that's the movie "Idiocracy"
That's not the point though. In isolation, being intelligent is a huge advantage and opens so many doors in your life. As you said, hardworking + intelligence is better than hardworking. There is also no correlation between laziness and intelligence. Some people just lazy af.
I think their point was that because you are academically gifted you are given more opportunities to get ahead in life. Like I know a lot of people who were gifted academically and were given full ride scholarships to travel and study abroad. But its still up to that person to take those opportunities or not.
People who are born to parents who love and cherish them are the truly privileged ones.
Preach. Having bad parents makes life harder for everyone.
Amen 🙏
Bonus points if it’s both parents. I’m lucky enough to have one whom I love very much back. The other is… well I’m glad they’re alive and well at least.
almost like that should be the gold standard, but idk how some people can advocate for tearing apart family structures when it’s so important for success
True I will always be grateful I was born with two parents that cherish and love me 👍
Im Native American Indian, an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation in the U.S. and half Black. Just wanted to say we DO pay taxes! On and off the rez. Otherwise, appreciate all the other key points Preach preached 🥰 Historical trauma is REAL!
Then why stay in reservations? Just curious.
You got the pretty privilege tho'🙂
I’m pleased you mentioned two parent household privilege. Probably the biggest determinant of success in life.
I would argue geography is the same tier. And all other privileges are below these two. Even above stuff like money, able bodied and looks.
It's sad, but yeah I agree.
With loving caring and supportive parents
I don't concider being born into a rich family "success" so the statistics do be looking that way
@@WrathofFenrir99 It's luck. You didn't do it so you didn't suceed.
Not being sexually violated at a very young age and not living with that trauma is an A-tier privilege to me, being assaulted just sucks your soul out of your mind and body.
Basic security and safety is definitely an important thing especially for certain demographics. Many people won't ever understand that. My heart goes out to those that have ever been violated in that way.
Not being sexually violated isin't a privilege😭
It's a right bruh😕
@@NawUniqueHandle it should be but in a world where the child is considered a liar and the culprit is actively protected then it becomes a priveldge , a right becomes a priveldge where that right is actively and aggressively taken from individuals and all families do is choose to live in their own blissful ignorance.
That sucks ass but atleast you aren't a sex slave.
@@hainleysimpson1507 try to read the room jerri , at least stop proving u have intelligence of an amoeba.
Thanks for mentioning the native American privilege. The fact that my daughter is Alaskan native and how many native American women go missing without a word. I'm scared for her. When I hear her great grandma talk about not being allowed to talk in her language as a child and the things that where done to her, makes me cry. ❤️ As she taught my daughter her language, and whispered it because of what happened to her. I asked her why she would whispered and she told me her story, made my heart break.
Is the stuf with native Americans still going or did it stop in the 90s?
Hell my tribe always get overlooked... Idk about that but the government is slowly killing us
@@neoanimegirl exactly like my tribe has garnered hundreds of millions of dollars yet we still got shitty schools and high poverty
I'm from Australia is the Native American history a lot like aborignal Australian history. Cause here in Australia, the 'stolen generation' from like 1910s to late 1970s, Native aboriginal famlies would be separated to 'breed out' the aboriginal. I'm not aborignal so i don't really understand it first hand, but just curious if the nations people of america are similar to that of aboringal australians?
@@thomaslarkin5222 yes probably very similar
As a disabled person who is finding success I would sell it for an abled body. It’s definitely an F tier.
I feel so much pain every single day, the costs of surgeries are high, and way people and society view me is sad. I don’t want hate but I also don’t want you pity. I just want to be a normal person.
I definitely feel where your coming from. At the same time I wish the world had more pity for "normal" people. Although it can be misguided at least it's a manifestation of the good that's in people. I feel like there must be an important distinction between those that really care and understand healthy ways to express it and those that are virtue signalling without showing you the proper amount of respect.
@@richardzazanis4764do you think gay privilege is real?
Preach- “Well I’m already a handsome black person”
This made me immediately hit the like button. Lol
I think Aba said that
@@AshDeep nah
No lies detected lol
He looks like a woman
Ok Preach!
“But your legs” you guys are crazy. I’m going to hell for laughing at that but I couldn’t help it😂😂😂
We can dance in the flames together, because I did too.
I’ll be there with y’all. 🤣🤣🤣
I laughed really hard but I'm an atheist so I ain't got to worry about burning lol
@@Mel-jy4kc I wouldn't be to sure about that.. I think that in hell our legs are gonna be sick
Right there with you💯😂
God please make more tier lists. This is fucking hilarious
👍
Only tier list video I’ve ever sat thru.
God dont make tier lists hyuck hyuck
This is interesting. I always tell my bf that he's privileged because he has good eye sight, mean while I have to wear glasses, pay for them + exams + if I want contacts + the price for the fitting. It's expensive, he's always shocked at how much I have to pay yearly just to see clearly. And imagine how people who are blind feel about me, sure she wears glasses but that's still better than being blind. We're all privileged in some or a lot of ways, don't forget that. And when you remember those privileges, it just makes you more grateful for what you do have, even if someone has more.
If you live in the us, buy glasses online. Definitely, way cheaper that from a physical store.
Imagine needing glasses
I can imagine that
very well said.
Oh man, Twitter will have a meltdown if this gets viral.
Why?
Explain
@@FrathouseMouse i literally forgot twitter existed until now
Wtf is Twitter.. ohhhh wait NVM
The most toxic place in society will know and it will be hilarious. 🤣
As a lighter skinned physically attractive black woman, I can say my life is S tier. I come from a somewhat affluent back ground thanks to my parents working their asses off, I have always had stability and everything I needed. My life is super easy. My parents afforded me to stay home until I finish grad school, work part time, and live comfortably. Because I look young, people want to take care of me and have more patience with me. My location also plays a big part. The worst things I ever had to worry about is not being black enough, having my sexuality questioned due to not dating, and finding myself in general. I can't really complain.
Sounds like you've had it better then me. I thought black men had it easier or something lol. My parents didn't quite work their asses off and eventually split up so college or grad school wasn't an option. Not complaining though I just think this whole idea of magic privileges granting you everything is hilarious. Money and a stable family seems like the key to a lot more.
@@KillaBryx Well I haven't finished the video but privilege dosen't mean easy mode or that life is automatically easy.
A poor white kid that has crack addict parents and struggles to have most meals still has white privilege even though his life might be harder than most people in general.
The concept of privilege is real but its very nuanced. Most people don't care to actually understand what racial and gender privileges really mean. Also privileges are most important when one major group in a certain area or country or place utilized their privilege knowingly or unknowingly to subjugate other people in a large meaningful way. Thats why the education about privilege is important but this doesn't mean that a person from the privileged group has a good or easier life.
@@TheMariemarie16 you done with your CRT spouting?
@@WinterStones Are you done using acronyms that you don't fully understand? This is common sense and has nothing to do with any current theories. Ever since the beginning of time some are up and some are down and race, tribe and creed divide us. If you want to help make yourself aware of any inequalities in society then do so if not stay online typing up alphabet soup in the form of nonsense questions. 🤣🤣
@@WinterStones hes an idiot, don't waste time on him
Born with a dutch passport in the Caribbean, I never realized how lucky I was till I wanted to travel. Easy mode. Job everywhere.
Damn imagine if you was strain
im blessed im australian my passport is like a open ticket honestly id hate to be like from the middel east or what not
Are you from Curacao?
@@toade1583 Si, Antiano mi ta :)
As a fellow Dutch person - what exactly makes the Dutch passport attractive? Is there some stereotype you encountered which helped you?
Am I the only one who is in love with their conversation??? Like I like how they listen to the each other and understand what the other person is saying without getting mad or anything. I LOVE IT!!
Do you think gay privilege is real
I'm glad you guys included smart privilege because most people overlook how drastically different shit is for people of different intelligence levels
Or even just average intelligence.
Being smart is great but if you are lazy you might not do too much with it but being incredibly low intelligence is still going to be SO much harder than someone who is average.
You could also consider that an intelligent person that is well intentioned will often have more burdens and difficulty fitting in or even finding contentment in life surrounded by disorder and irrationality. But then you have the intelligent that use it without a sense of responsibility or care for the bigger picture. I just think being kinda smart in some stuff can be a lot of trouble if you're still an idiot with how you use it or how others treat you because of it. Most intelligent people die for being different or disappear silently into history never making a difference beyond a few close to them if they are lucky.
Another thing I've found interesting is a lot of "geniuses" throughout history, and this is in many subjects, are often prone to depression. It plays into the who crazy genius thing as well. I still think being smart is an amazing privilege, but it's interesting to see the draw backs.
@@Kaunedhiel well, a quote from a famous historical person whose name I forgot is that smart people think of all the consequences while those not as smart are more ignorant. Ignorance is bliss.
Our dynamic is changing. Before you didn’t need to be smart, just really, really strong. But that was in the past. Now being smart matters, but we kinda over emphasize it while demonizing being strong, unless you’re attractive.
Being higher iq you also see problems that others will not see, or also they may see problems but you will see the picture more clearly. in a way it gives you more problems more worries to think about, more responsibility to try and fix things than the below average iq
On the able/disabled point:
I'm able, but I tore my ACL recently - so I had a wheelchair, etc...
Bruh - I will never take my legs for granted again and I *respect* disabled people even harder.
Especially since my shower is on the second floor of my place....it was rough...so i don't even wanna imagine what they deal with daily. God bless em all.
Same here, tore my ACL in the 5th grade. I was bed bound for 6 weeks and had to use crutches. Showering and using the bathroom were beyond difficult.
I am so grateful I am well but looking back on it, I can’t imagine what it would be like waking up that way everyday for the rest of my life. My heart goes out to them.
Same here. Over two months of non-weight bearing and limited to the first floor. Mobility does not suck.
I agree. But I just want to say that the first few months are different than if you spend your entire live like that. For example you wouldn't put the shower in the second floor if you were permanently disabled. And some things get easier when done a lot of times.
#1 Privilege: Being able to watch these amazing videos
Facts
Where would you rank it?
@@zippo5294 s tier
@@edgard.afromexican6972 I can’t disagree
S+ tier
Bizarre thing about lightskinned privilege, I get it's often the reverse in non-white families, but in white families from what I've seen you get frowned at and you get comments if you're too pale. The pre-millennial generations in particular really seem to admire the tanned look. Not saying you should change the ranking based on that, but I think it's an interesting phenomenon 😅
It used to be that paler was better, because if you were wealthy you could stay inside all day, and show off your pale skin. Then suddenly people could take holidays in exotic locations and come back with tans to show off their wealth instead (and i guess different workers work inside so...). There was even a trend were people would lay in the sun and get completely sunburned, lobster red and painful, and only then pun on creme, because they thought it would optimize the tanning process.
Sort of similar to how it used to be more attractive to be slightly pudgy than super thin, because then you had money to eat.
Being light skinned is bad in prison your too dark for white people and too light for dark people. Man they done called me el de barge , high yellow etc. my white dad cut my hair off because he said my hairs nappy
A lot of people equate privilege with wealth but don't realize that wealth is only one of the privileges.
Agreed
@Robert Burger Dude. I’m a leftist and I realize that everyone has privileges and disadvantages. You’d be hard pressed to find someone with every privilege you can think of. And sir. There’s a whole ass right wing where majority of those people think privilege is fake, just “WoRk HaRdEr”
But with that wealth, they can buy additional privileges. Like beauty, fitness, health, lighter skin, etc.
@Robert Burger I’m a lefty and what I’ve seen is people to the right will latch one a word or concept in a statement or movement without nuance and then call you a commie, socialist or terrorist. Typically.
@Robert Burger lol non-whiteness you mean you married a person of color? The radical lefties I’ve seen btw have been more so the moderate/corporate ones spouting identity politics 24/7 while the lefties labeled as “radical leftists” just want universal education, healthcare, housing and a federal jobs guarantee, it’s sad really
I grew up in a trailer park in the United States, and now I live in Costa Rica as an adult. I can say from experience that being trailer trash in the United States I had a much higher quality of life than most middle-class Costa Ricans. I normally don't pay much attention to the concept of privilege, but I know from experience that there is no greater privilege than being born in a country with good infrastructure.
Learned that when I deployed to Iraq.
@@mattiOTX That's a good point. I spent a year in Afghanistan in 2010. They have it way worse than Costa Ricans, who have it way worse than Americans.
Yup being born in a 1st world country is one of the greatest privileges you can get
@@jamesmichaels3848 100% my dad travelled across south and southeast Asia and the pics he took made me glad that even if I'm poor I'm glad I live in the us. I don't have to worry about my water being clean or illnesses. Food is well regulated and don't have to worry about crazy bacteria and other shit in food cause here all that shit is properly processed. I mean we have constant electricity. Some people don't realize how much good shit we got.
Does the infrastructure stop you having COVID?
Does the infrastructure help you live longer?
Does the infrastructure protect your children from p dough files?
As a Canadian I'm glad you shed light on our indigenous treatment
Mr blackface Trudeau doesn’t seem to care at all
Indigenous people's tribal warfare is not even on the same level as mass genocide
Food also affects your IQ and temperament as well. Basically having access to good food alone can affect how well you do in school, how you carry yourself and of course your health.
I love how when they disagree they don't argue and try their best to understand each other I feel like that is rare and everything they say is so respectable and how they respond is so respectful
What healthy dialogue looks like. They hear each other out instead of letting egos get in the way.
It shows how theyve been homies honestly
I can’t believe all that happened with native Americans, this world is really twisted…
Yeah if someone like epstein can dissappear without anyone involved getting arrested (many known and famous people) yu know shits fucked up then and now...
Have you heard of the Tsar's conquest of Russia ? The russian gullags during USSR?
@@FrontWood *FrontWood used: Deflection.*
The insecure American speciality!
_It's not very effective._
@@1Diddums I'm native american
@@1Diddums it's just that we're related to the Turkic people that we're also genocided in "Russia"
Homie said you can be disabled and be living your best lives and I thought of my dad (been in a wheelchair for the past 19 years) who my family out of the gutters, bought 4 houses, got his masters, his PhD, and I working on his 2nd PhD rn. I got mad respect for that nigga no cap. Still my crip though but he’s living his best life 🙏🏽🔥 love you dad
This comment made me so happy you don't even know. I've got some medical problems that will lead me to being in a wheelchair later and I am terrified of raising children as a disabled father. Hearing how proud you are of your father despite his difficulties gives me hope that I can be a good father in the future despite mine.
Edit: typo
Yeah but that’s not anything to do with his disability but money. That’s money privilege not rlly restated to being disabled
@@RyanOManchester do what you can while you can (building wealth etc)
@@joe_mama_ I forgot to mention that at hr time my dad got into an accident (when he lost his ability to walk and use his hands properly) him and my mom were swimming in hospital bill debt and he lost his job as it was a contract job and he spent 3 mo the in hospital. My mom was working a minimum wage job and I was still a baby so I didn’t make anything any better, we basically vouch surfed for years. We also rented at a few places for some years. We lived pretty hard in very small places, in places with no ramps and tons of stairs. My dad bought his first house in 2012 and in 2014 my mom lost her job and my dad became the primary source of income. Saying it was more money privileged is a bit of a misleading thing because we didn’t have any money. No one in our family really helped. My dad just trusted in his education and got himself jobs and worked his way up to the position he’s in.
I've learned more from watching Aba and Preach than all my twelve years of public school combined 😂
do you think lgbtq black men are more privileged than straight white men
Great content! It was really interesting and fun to hear your perspectives. Personally I would put IQ privilege in maybe A tier. I feel people with high IQs are not always seen or taken into account but that's just me
I think knowing more is a privilege yes butttt i think ide be alot happier if i were dumb
🤷♀️
@@alisab4811 it does take a very strong person to live with alota knowledge
@@alisab4811 yeah, I heard people with really high IQs commit suicide more because less people can relate to them
@@alisab4811 so i guess your wish was granted
It depends
Thank You Preach. My mother was one of the kids taken from a reserve and put into the schools. The family went and took her back along with her sisters and brothers. That school fucked her up so bad. In turn I suffered as a child from her emotional and mental damage from those schools. I seen my mother drunk and passed out on the stairs and other things Id rather not share. Because she was in that state it flowed down to me. Welfare, I've eaten out of grange cans because she spent the money on booze or one of her many boyfriends. Foster home, hand me downs, stealing, fighting ...anything I needed to stay alive with food in my belly. My grandmother told me one of her drunken boyfriends beat me so bad I ended up at emerg. Thankfully I don't remember anything of that. Even though I am functional as an adult there is deep psychological scars/damage. Prime example. Interpersonal relations. I have ZERO trust that anyone has my best interest at heart. Food anxiety. I have lots of food to eat now. But when my cupboards get to certain level and I start reverting back to that survival mode, the panic of "where is my next meal?" creeps into my mind. Some people the residential schools weren't a big deal. But they were. They were hell bent on CULTURAL GENOCICE. There is even slight evidence that medical experimentation was possibly happening at the schools. Preach was right in saying. The children were treat like prisoners' of war. And the kids that came from those parents are damaged too.
I’m so surprised to hear this cause in my experience everyone is always focused on what the USA did to Native Americans and praising Canada for what they did. Although i don’t know if this happened in the USA too… but I’m so sorry that had to happen to you, I hope you can find peace and happiness now though
🙏
❤❣❤❣❤
i am so sorry that your mother went through all that, I can only imagine the frustration you felt at not being able to do anything about it and hope you are doing better now. It always frustrates me how so little is mentioned about natives and how the government shoves it under the rug. I cried reading this comment because nobody should go through all of that. I wish you the best and I'm glad things are looking better for you.
Sorry to hear that that happened to you and your family 😰 I really hope you can keep going with your life and achieve wonderful things!
You know what a trailer that is clean, well kept and decorated is not a bad thing. Now days it is considered a tiny home. I raised my children in a trailer so I could be a stay at home mom and homeschool them. We lived on 24-28 k a year from the time I had my first kid which started in 1993. We bought a brand new 1992 trailer that I slowly redid the inside even with wood floors. I plastered the walls and kept it spotless. My kids had a yard that was landscaped nicely and we had food, clothes and lots of toys. It was a choice that ai do not regret.
There's some pretty amazing disabled people out there. As a disabled Army vet, I'm going to name a few of my brothers in arms as examples. Chad Jukes (RA) and Thomas Linville (USMC) are both amputees that climbed the summit of Mt. Everest. Travis Mills (RA) is a quadruple amputee that has a foundation and retreat in Maine that helps other veterans and their families adapt their lives to the emotional and/or physical trauma soldiers sustain during service.
Privilege is nothing when you have family : Dominic Toretto
dumbest shit ive ever heard
Dominic Toretto privilege
Having a family is privilege
- Orphan crying 😢
Having a family is a privilege, who is that Toretto dumbass that said it?
@@asmbeats5369 AUNQUE DIGAN QUE SOY
Natives: You destroyed my culture, killed our children, and secluded us to the most desolate areas of the nation.
US Govt : Wanna build a casino?
STOP 😂😂
There were whites living in North America BEFOE the so-called natives arrived and killed off all the whites. So the land in North America was stolen first form the whites!!! So stop with the "natives" meaning Indians shit. The whites are the natives.
@@pduffy421 Are you high?
@@pduffy421 Come the fuck on dude.
@@pduffy421 lmao 😂😂😂😂, sure dude 🙄 what's your sources? Where do you get that dumb ass Info from? Lmao. This is the funniest shit I've seen in a LONG time 😂😂
I relate to the geographic privilege soo much growing up in africa having corrupt gouvernment , needing a visa to travel almost anywhere and not getting it since you're a male , the education ..etc so seeing Americans complain and fight about the most insignificant stuff really can be annoying at times
It drives me nuts when other Americans act like they aren't privileged to live in the U.S. and act as though this is the worst country to live in. Not saying America doesn't have it's problems but it is definitely one of the best countries to live in. In my opinion it's the best.
@@jerrybena6679 Maybe not the best, you don't have free health insurance, nor housing help etc...
@@TheLastEgg08 that's fair, definitely significantly better than second or third world nations though
@@TheLastEgg08 the issue with free healthcare is that, sure it’s free, but you get a lesser quality of care. I have a pre-existing condition called hemophilia. My medication NOW is a few thousand dollars. My medication under free health care could be a lot more expensive, to damn near unobtainable from my financial standing. I wouldn’t get the best care should I be hospitalized, and I need a specialized team to conduct that care.
I was talking to a buddy of mine from Nepal about this once. He's heavily left leaning, but he gets pissed when people talk about how "victimized" they are and how they're being oppressed. He had family killed when China invaded Nepal, which is why they left. His family knows what it's like to actually be oppressed.
good childhood and ongoing supportive parents or close family is 100% S tier privilege
At first I was like “okay here we go” but after preach talked about the hardships of the indigenous people and the effects of residential schools, really made me appreciate you guys. My blood relatives were part of the 60s scoop and my kokum (grandma) suffered in residential schools. Hearing the amount of kids found at church’s has fuelled a rage in me that has effected my life for worse. But I try to honour my culture and better my life to honour those kids who couldn’t live theirs. Rest In Peace children. You deserved so much better 😢
Be strong my brother and take care of yourself
🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
As an Australian Aboriginal i had no idea they did that so recently in Canada. Unfortunately Australia did that to my people to up till the 70s. My grandparents were taken from their families as children and they tried to marry them off to white people to "breed the savage out". What people don't understand is that it affects the future generations like us as well. Stay strong brother and best of luck.
@Eat the socialist lol you’re just full of hot takes. Telling somebody whose grandparents’ generation were kidnapped and killed that they’re better off this way…
North Americans effectively tried and greatly succeeded in erasing the Native American culture, community and people.
It's really interesting to see everyone's take, and how things change from person to person. For me being a white dude from a poor family in Eastern Europe sucks ass. Sure if strictly talking about Eastern Europe, dark skin, being a woman, being not straight are disadvantages. But as soon as i move to west, that changes. My personal experience, went to England to study, racked debt, had to work my ass off during uni so i can afford to live. Couldn't get a *free maintaince loan cuz i wasn't a citizen. My parents didn't have money to help. And then gender and skin colour. I remember vividly being told that I'm lucky i am white and have a lot of privilege. And i just couldn't understand how that worked. There were programs to help minorities with money or counsel. Not me. I have been rejected from jobs/internships because i was white and they had to fill their quote of diversity. When I finally got a job with a garbage piece of shit supervisor being a man bit me in the ass. Compared to my female counterparts, i was being told to stay late, being harshly criticised for small mistakes and always sent to do more physical stuff ( hanging something, bring shit from storage etc). So as much as I would want to rank things different, i can't just because my personal experience. What really fucking sucks is being told that I'm privileged when I was struggling with debt and putting food on the table. That shit made me so resentful towards a lot of people. But eh now I'm like whatever, call me what you want, i know my struggles
Nice comment negus, thank you for sharing.
Same man. Southeastern European here...went through living hell to make it in the west. Eastern Europeaneans are considered as a lower class white people.
@@valuedCustomer2929 100%
Love this! I don’t love this for you, but this is very telling…
Yes! Yes yes yes! Finally someone else talked about it. I have almost exactly the same experience as you, also from Eastern Europe and moved to the U.K. I cannot even explain how much racism I've faced from black and Asian people every single day of my life in the U.K. How privileged they all were, always getting away with stuff and be given free opportunities just because of the colour of their skin.
We come from the worst part of the world for white people. We were oppressed for much longer than black people were and yet we, white people, are somehow superior to them? Truth is, nobody cares or even wants to know how hard white people have it, because we're the first child of the family that always has to keep their mouth shut. That's life I guess.
To everyone trying to breakup the duo: Preach proving his value value with the tier colors.
He always says that one thing that just "redeems himself"...every time...
P.s. I was never for them splittin'. Niggas out here wildin'.
@@seyniole1898 I think they're funnier together and I'd doubt I'd watch them individually. It's the classic funny/straight man routine and they switch roles seamlessly back and forth.
He said ‘trans-Rachel’ - I liked.
Preach has good input and their personalities complement each other. And I love his laugh
Who’s trying to break up the duo? I’ve never seen that
Man I’m part Native American, and I know my grandpa’s parents left the reservation at an early age and now I’m wondering what they went through… and how my grandpa was raised, cause he looks (his skin is olive but I always thought it was a tan cause he’s outside a lot) and acts ‘white’ and doesn’t have many Native American items or traditions. I do know my great great great grandma walked the trail of tears as a kid too
Having a high IQ doesn’t mean you can/will utilize it well.
Facts. You could be put in a position where your unable to utilize it. (Eg. Dropping out to make ends meet)
Do a "Cringe Tier" based off the video sites you guys review..... shit's gonna be hilarious!!!!
Put Skippy on that list lol
@@izzywaysart6597 and you know Eren is gonna be somewhere up there lol
Skippy would be S tier
I want this now 🤣
Get this man more upvotes
Big up speaking on issues affecting Native Americans. This gets painfully overlooked and doesn't get addressed enough.
ALL FACTS!!
Yeah it wasnt just Canada either. This happened in america too.
Native Americans are not innocent they had African Americans slaves. For example I’n the trail of tears black creeks were there
At least native Americans were given land. Blk people built this country and never got a damn thing but more racist laws
@@mrlofi333 tell that to the freed men and the black plantation owners. Play writes, lawyers, judges etc. Or the blacks who fought on the side of the confederacy, not forced. Most were farmers who OWNED land. Who were being taxed out the wazoo on the behest of the industries of the north.
If you mean Jim crow and redlining and all that those laws didnt target black people they targeted the poor and were used by racist people to keep black people down. But these laws and practices were repealed and shunned 70ish years ago. The native people to this day do not have the same rights as other citizens in america and canada.
Btw... black plantation owners own native slaves too.
Not too long ago in Ireland being born out of wedlock or losing your parents ended up like the way Preach talked about native children. There have also been mass graves found, children sexually assaulted etc. 😧
Watching this, it's very clear they are Canadian and not American. They are considering things from an international perspective, "I'd rather be rich in a poor country" or passport privileges, etc. Americans usually only consider privilliges within America and can't conceive of what life is like in other countries unless they are the type who travel. Just something I've noticed about Americans in general, not all Americans are like this but usually the rest of the world doesn't really factor into their thinking.
Big facts. Cheers!🍻
@Eat the socialist vuvuzuela bottom text
Exactly. As an American that lived and grew up overseas, the thought process is very different.
They are not only Canadian, but I believe both are immigrants thrmselves, not just the children of immigrants. Even if they had immigrated to America, that would give them global perspective. But you are correct. We are very insular.
Eat the socialist
Bro, Americans in general regardless of political leaning are closed minded and self centered and have little knowledge of the outside world. The farther you go down south the more ignorant worldwise. I've never seen a group of people who's entire existence is based on articles and news. They have opinions on entire countries and people from there when they haven't left their front porch let alone their state or country. Traveling to Americans is the Caribbean or basic tourism.
Passport privilege is understated tbh, you can have a lot of the other S Tier privileges but if you’re born in a country with little to no opportunities, you are barely able to leverage the other privileges
I agree. I live in South-Africa, even on the African continent, there is a hierarchy of countries.
Regardless of the background of the people who go on and on about this privilege stuff, the only privilege I see is their first-world privilege.
I was so triggered with your Polish food comment at the end that I had to wipe my tears with my passport.
🤣🤣🤣🤣
🤦🏽♀️😂😂😂🤪
Glad you’re talking about indigenous Preach. Not to mention the highway of tears, from Washington all up British Columbia. It’s INSANE
Do you think gay privilege is real
These things you said about Brazil, I felt compelled to point few things. First thing: we have no restrictions with black people on television, quite the contrary, we have prime-time journalism presenters who are black. Second: Most people from "samba" schools are black, and maybe you're saying about drum queens being white, well it's actually a mix, sometimes black, sometimes white, it depends on who the samba school (whose board is mostly black) chooses to represent, and they are always famous people. As for food, I've seen a lot of reaction videos of Americans eating our sweets and foods, it's just too far from your industrialized diet, it's the equivalent of asking an herbivore to eat meat. What matters is that our cuisine is by far one of the most nutritious and healthy in the world, thanks to our African origins. [Sorry, i translated in google translate]
"we have no restrictions with black people on television"
Privileged Brazilian detected
Falou tudo
They didn't say white, they said light skinned
@@estevanmartins5319 ???
@@estevanmartins5319 How is he privileged if he said the truth, but we dont have restrictions, black people always been on Tv, its fucking Brazil, our two biggest movies involved either A black protagonist ( Cidade de Deus) or some very good black actor in a important role. The thing about Aba saying that brazilians lost their shit when a dark skinned lady won the samba thing is a straight up lie, most of them are already black, and in my 20 years i never seen one person batting and eye because of a black person on TV, and i live in the """"most racist"""" state
I don't think ya'll know how legendary this video is about to become...
It better
That’s exactly what I thought. I can also see this becoming a massive TH-cam trend.
This is a great idea. No matter how you fill this chart it makes you think. Being a Native American in my area is pretty cool, however, being a Native American in some areas of the country is really depressing. Having the opportunity to get to a better place can be everything. Being stuck in North Korea with no way out could mean slow-motion death. We are sooooo... lucky you actually have people picking low-paying college majors and still having a decent life. This would be beyond irresponsible in most places.
I personally would put many more groups in the middle tiers.
A rez close to a city is ok, but the ones who are far from civilisation sck sht... support Warrior Society!
Yes, please do the food tier! Hahahaha
However.......barbecue is not Brazil's main dish. Meat is pretty pricy in Brazil. That's like saying that wagyu beef is what Japanese people are known for. Our main dishes are things that everyday people can afford and what can be found locally. SInce Brazil is huge, each region has its own particularities. If you find a Brazilian that tells you he is gonna introduce you to Brazilian food and take you to a barbecue place, that person is privileged hahahaha. Most Brazilians will show you Brigadeiro, Pão de Queijo, Feijão, Moqueca....
North: ingredients from the Amazon (Tacacá, Tucupi, Maniçoba). Heavy influence from the native Brazilians.
Northeast: maybe the most diverse, a mix of seafood, cassava dishes, tapioca, jerk beef, couscous and vegetables. Heavily influenced by our African and Native Brazilian heritage.
Southeast: here we have São Paulo, Rio, MInas Gerais and Espirito Santo. Rio only has Feijoada. Period. Minas Gerais probably has the best food in Brazil, and its main characteristic is using simple ingredients to create amazing flavors (Pão de queijo, Vaca atolada, Feijão Tropeiro). São Paulo is the place to find food from all over the world. Mostly Japanese, Italian and Arab (fun fact: the main fast food chain restaurant in São Paulo is called habibs.....and they serve mostly arab pastries like Kibeh and Sfiha). Espirito Santo has tones of seafood dishes, including the famous Moqueca.
South: Barbecue. Period.
Resumiu sul a churrasco KKKKKKKKKKKK, tu deve ta viajando e muito pra falar uma merda dessas, os paulista tem comida italiana e os cara do sul n? literalmente tem porra de colonia e cidades no sul que os cara falam alemão/italiano e portugues, São Paulo se resume a Nova York BR, zero culinaria propria e sim culinaria dos outros que chegam ali e começam um negocio, e fast food ruim q nem habibs
Conclusion money is the biggest privilege there is
Money buys POLITICAL POWER... which gets you more money...
Which makes sense, because money was created to overcome the barter system. Money was literally made to be the neutral equivalent for everything
The exact quote was "to kill the indian in the child" I was lucky that my dad didn't have to go to a residential school and have the baggage from that because my great grandfather fought in both world wars and had to renounce his mètis status we only recently rediscovered are roots
How is your experience in Canada or America?
reading more into these residential schools, its scary seeing the similarities of what my grandfather went through in the church schools in ireland, or the womens nun schools here too(really nasty stuff).
@@jamescanjuggle As a black man i always respect the irish because they experienced the same wrath we did from the british empire. When i do see brits in any of the islands though lol always fireworks, let's just say that. For the ancestors lol
My Metis grandparents did go to residential school and were very successful people. My grandfather was a post master in Duck lake Saskatchewan and was a war veteran. My grandmother was a successful manager. Yet due to their success they were shunned and ostrisized by their own people. While we point out the clean water issue, we can also point out natives within their own communities don't educate themselves on water purification technologies. First Nations put no effort into solving these issues but wait for Canadians to solve the clean water issues for them. Taxpayers have funded billions to try to solve this issue. Traditions are great and help us learn about history, but being stuck in the past will mean the is no future.
@@calvinstrom8862 Couldn't agree more, some cultures just never want to move forward. The ones that do, are shunned, vilified and ostracized by their own community.
My man's said " I went from democrat to republican in one paycheck " LMFAO BRUV.
Timestamp??
@@rockysalvatore435 5.50mins mark.
Doesn't this prove he's a hypocrite??
@@rockysalvatore435 It does, but every lefty becomes a republican after taxes. Look at the Bernie beo Neokuul, she yammerd on how rich people need to be taxed more. Then she became wealthy and the first place she moved was Texas (no state tax) and bought a 2 million dollar apartment
I'm teary eyed listening to the treatment of native kids 😪 it's so unacceptable. How can people say they believe in God and treat other humans like that
I REALLY appreciate this video. EVERYONE has some sort of privilege....P E R I O D. If you disagree chances are you're DEEP into this new "victimhood" culture and I have nothing to say to or for you.
Yep. Wallowing in victimhood is one of the easiest ways to kill your motivation in life. Instead of taking responsibility, victims expect others to change their circumstances for them.
Agreed
Victim culture
Yeah america is basically like the victim olympics at this point, look at twitter.
Well obviously not everyone, but the only ppl without any privilege are completely 1/1000000000 cases
Good looks privilege is an obvious S tier. Everybody is prone to liking you more and you get your way with things a lot easier. Job applications, relationships, etc. Especially if ur a woman, you can take advantage of how downbad men are and make easy bank.
Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk.
@Anal Farmer5 Well depends if you're born into money lol then its the same as looks privilege
"61% chance of dying, I don't know what school that is" Hogwarts maybe?
Lmao
I thought this video was going to irritate me but what can I say, as usual, you guys just crack me up. Great video. Very entertaining.
Financial privilege should have its own tier, like before anything else. The very "recruitment tier list" don't even apply to those who have financial privileges.
Creative mode
Oh yeah being rich makes things so much easier
In general yeah it's #1. But even more accurate is to split it up into different types, like 'financially secure' [S tier] and 'rich' [SS+ tier], because those are drastically different levels of privilege. If you're just financially secure, then yeah you don't have to worry about money which is huge, but if you're rich then you have influence, and that's a whole different ballgame then.
The best privilege is not seeing yourself as a victim.
Tell that to the trans’ woman who comes from the Alphabet Mafia.
The abuse/ online insults/smashed the back door with no pay/ beaten up by their fellow men.
The list is endless!
You’re telling me they don’t matter?
IQ privilege didn't seem to matter much.
Then I realized my struggles were from being ugly and broke. Doing well in my life is solely because of having a high IQ, it changes lives realizing ways to grind up in the world.
This tier list is damn solid.. Could you leave some logical fallacies next time? The current list is hard to argue with...
Alot of smart people imo are ugly but are successful
You don’t get as far professionally if you sink a lot of time into your appearance. Smart people have realized they can leverage their strengths more effectively with their mind.
Kat KireyevA Uhhh what? Most professionals are well groomed and thus at least somewhat if not very attractive
@@dirtydead4144 If a forth is pretty and a forth is smart then only a forth of the smart are pretty.
I love your videos, I agree with a lot of your opinions. I was stunned when you guys mentioned the fact that in Brazil Afro-Brazilians are not allowed on television.
I am Brazilian myself and I grew up watching some of my favourite black Brazilian artists and actors. Like Cris vianna, Olivia Duarte, Juliana Alves and actors Lazaro Ramos, singer and actor seu jorge (my personal favourite), rafael zulo. Many more actors that are celebrated in Brazil for there artistry. Samba is Afro-Brazilian and samba schools have a predominantly Afro-Brazilian presence. There have been countless samba queens that are black. But I am sure you guys weren’t making things up, correct me if I am wrong guys.
Idk, someone probably told them a lie or exagerration, because Pele and Mussum where on TV during the black and white times of television in here, and we grew up seeing a lot of black acotrs and singers on TV.
Me parece uma puta mentira do krl oq eles falaram ali, KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK brasil né estados unidos n
Thank you bro, I had to scroll way too far to find this!
There is no such a thing as "dark skinned people not being allowed on TV in Brazil" LOL!!
"Up to 1996, that's yesterday" I too think of the 90's as not that long ago.
Right! But the 90’s babies are in their 30’s or approaching their 30’s. It still doesn’t feel like it’s been that long ago.
Y'all been uploading like crazy!!! They working over hours - love it!
“Shout out my people in Haiti” had me ROLLING 😭😂
"do you wanna carry a baby for 9 months, or just be like baby it's gonna be OK" lmao I love that line
Being honest:
I disagree on a few. Agree on most. HOWEVER, I appreciate the honesty, and logical clear thinking. As always, thanks.
Elaborate what you disagree with
The important part is that there *was* logic - not just a gut reaction based on personal bias. That's what's usually missing in this conversation.
Explain
I think one way I can say I disagree is often they look at the privilege and what positive aspect comes with it but they barely mention what negative aspect come with it. Most of them are double edged sword, the only one that doesn't have a negative side effect is having all your body parts ... Even being rich can have a terrible affect, usually rich people that do suicide is because of the affect it has on their relationship with other human being or how they feel lonely, or it could even be the lack of having something to look forward to(Goals). I'd say most of their ranking were fine by itself but it's a dangerous topic to look at without acknowledging the downfall of each of them.
@@256alexdt then they have to dig down deeper and explore whether the positives outweigh the negatives. Most of their higher privilege rankings tend to fall into that criteria
For example being attractive might come with negatives such as trust issues, fake friends, jealously and self esteem issues. But even with all those considered, the positives that come with it far make up for it
Like everything in life, privilege is all a matter of "depends on..."
I am Jamaican and its super difficult to get a visa to travel anywhere. They’ll literally drill you and it interview process.
Same/worse In east Africa 😂😂😂
The way they argument is amazing...
Aba: makes a point
Preach: I agree also point 2
Aba: I agree I agree hahah
When i heard big booty privilege I laughed so hard.
I wish they had shown the whole process instead of just showing a few ranks.
For the boarding schools for Natives, there are so many elders that have stories. It's really sad. Children are sacred. They took so many sacred things from our people. Since I wasn't raised on the reserve, I can't fully perceive the pain that others felt. I'm privileged not to have grown up on the reserve. I was so upset to see it dwindling away, but our tribe was finally allowed to be independent! And now, we are starting to rebuild.
Two parent household is S tier, one of the biggest predictors of success even with data that includes households with what would be considered shitty parents