You are inferring things that I never implied. When did I ever call you "Some college kid"? Plenty of adults (of all ages) have been instructed by far-left liberals that push their social ideas on students. It was a comment on that system, not on you personally.
You could have been honest and acknowledged an error. Instead, you doubled down, again.
Talking to me, you said "your SJW college professor". Having gone to a Marianist college in the early 1980s, I can assure you I had no professor you would recognize as being SJWs. Although, one of my philosophy professors now calls himself The Maverick Philosopher. Perhaps you should go tell him that you think he's an SJW.
Again, I would recommend having that conversation with someone you know. If you do and that person communicates to you the importance of white people accepting their inherent privilege, I would honestly be open hearing about their perspective.
So, to be clear, you have the writings of Coates, Jabbar, the entire staff at The Root, etc. to look at, but when some random internet guy reports back on his conversation with a person, that's what will convince you?
Well, no one is going to confuse you with "some college kid" when you say things like that.
Usually, its the white/translucent hair.
Clearly we see this topic extremely differently. I would like to give some insight into my perspective. I have a semi-close work friend that communicated to me that, as a black man, hates the term "white privilege." He actually asked me to not use the term. He feels that the term diminishes black people's accomplishments and takes away personal responsibility from those that don't succeed (however that is measured). He did open my eyes about some real problems in our country that disproportionately affect black Americans (you have me questioning what to capitalize and what not to capitalize now......I have no idea). He definitely changed my mind on several topics, such as over-incarceration, the war on drugs, among other things. He didn't feel that these issues warranted promulgating white privilege, as every race, sex, religion, age, etc. will experience different types of privilege.
There are certainly black people that feel this way. Sometimes it's because they don't understand the terminology very well (for example, the notion of white privilege would enhance a black person's accomplishments, not diminish it), sometimes its a genuine viewpoint difference. I will certainly not try to tell him what his experience has been.
However, just from your description, and the past posting you have made, I would guess he is making the same sort of definition error that your quote from Prager U made. There is no privilege trump card. Privileges intersect and interact, and noting white privilege exists does nothing to take away from male, Christian, able-bodied, etc. privilege.
After having the conversation with him, how could I in good conscious, try to promulgate the idea of white privilege?
I can respect you not wishing to promulgate. How about you just refrain from advertising false notions of what white privilege means, such as the stuff from Dennis Prager?