There's a kind of brash assumption about the good life of being a white male that is based on the rosiest assumptions possible. You're a white male, so everyone listens to your opinion. You're a white male, so you never need to be scared of being attacked.
There's a level of faith in the good life of maleness and whiteness that makes it sound like pure paradise. Hence the reaction to the homeless man. OK, he has some financial and housing issues, but he can still wallow in that male white privilege!
That's one issue with their thinking, yes. But my objection is more general.
You can claim that you have unique perspectives and understanding based on your life experiences. No problem. You probably do. Many people do.
You can claim that others are incapable of understanding those perspectives, because they do not have those same life experience. A perfectly reasonable claim, and probably true. We can discuss it and attempt to achieve understanding on some intellectual level, but that will always be far short of having the actual experiences.
The problem is that having established that claim, that your experiences are unique and personal and not understandable by others, you cannot expect or require others to understand them -- let alone expect or require others to agree with the opinions you've formed because of those experiences.
That is exactly what a Christian is trying to do when she says, If you'd experienced God's grace the way I have, you'd know that Jesus's love is real and you'd repent of your atheism. Maybe so, but if you didn't, so you feel no onus to accept grace or divine revelation by hearsay. The UFO believer can say: If you'd seen what I saw, you'd believe in alien grays too. Maybe so, but you didn't, so you don't.
Part of getting it is understanding that the very reason you get it, your experiences, is the reason others don't get it, and cannot be argued or shouted into getting it. You can create a social milieu where people who don't get it will be willing or feel obliged to pretend to get it, or even honestly think they get it, but those people will disappoint you sooner or later, especially if you're not even willing to give them credit for trying. If you think you get it but can only imagine selfishness or hostility as the possible reasons why others don't, you are probably one of those pretenders yourself.
Respectfully,
Myriad
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