I find it amusing that my first thought, reading the headline, was that the ;post discussed privilege that belonged to the "laundering class" and pondering what that phrase meant - those who do the laundering for others, those who are able to launder their own clothes (as opposed to people who are not in a position to do so)? I totally get the post now that I've read it all though. Privilege is a slippery concept sometimes - it's too easy for one's own to become invisible.
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