>>1
What I got from the articles was that white privilege is, for example, not getting stared at when you walk into a convenience store. It seems less of a "keep the brothers down" thing, and more of a logical reaction to the behavior or black people. It's not really a "white priviege", but more of a "black
non-privilege."
Asians for example, don't get followed by security guards, and if they move into a neighborhood nobody thinks things are going downhill.
I think if fewer black people stole, behaved in inappropriate manners (for example, yelling in public), and were less of a nuisance than say, asians, there would be less of this "white privilege".