As a white person, I don't see how my opinion really matters. As long as a substantial number of my non-White activist friends and mentors find it a useful term, I will continue to follow their lead and use it. If, at some point, they decide that it's past its sell-by date and there's another umbrella term which works better that they'd prefer to see folks use, I'll start using it. I've already done this several times in my life and it doesn't seem an unreasonable thing to do.
There are a lot more axes of privilege than just economic though. Take my friend BB, who's of South Asian origin. Economically, he's roughly as privileged as I am. But when he's in queer spaces (including online spaces), he has to deal with the same level of racism as my Black friends. (He's basically left social media due to the harassment and doxing he faced some years ago. This isn't an unusual problem for my activist friends who are POC; very few of my white cis male activist friends have had to deal with it, however.) I was legitimately worried for his safety during his recent trip to Europe, which came only a week after an attack on a gay bar in Oslo perpetrated by a Norwegian citizen of Iranian descent. I wouldn't've had the same worries about a white or white-passing friend,Travis B. wrote:Take for instance Indian-American versus African-American people - they are lumped together by "people of color", even though the former is overall quite privileged (e.g. the highest-earning ethnic group in the US) in reality while the latter is anything but. As a software engineer this has been very much my own experience - I have worked with very many Indian-Americans in both software engineer and management roles, while I have worked with very few Black people in such roles.
That must be why people don't say it.Travis B. wrote: ↑Tue Aug 02, 2022 12:24 pm imagine if people said "People of Color's Lives Matter" rather than "Black Lives Matter" - it would dilute the fact that "Black Lives Matter" is in particular about the treatment of Black people and not, say, Chinese-American people, who have not had the same experiences in America.
IME, folks use the term "people of color" when it's appropriate (e.g. when talking about forms of discrimination faced by most if not all non-white folks) and more specific terms when those are needed. Maybe you find folks using it to be weasly, but that's a problem with those folks' behaviour, not with the term as such.