"a series of suggestions"... chances are, most children who volunteer to wear these wristbands probably are more aware of privilege than other kids who really couldn't care less.
I think that's the whole intent, to get to the kids who sadly couldn't care less about their privilege and force them to face it.
This is a pretty weird idea though, and I'm pretty sure it goes against freedom or some patriotic sh**t like that.
How do you think some (very white) high schooler in Morgantown, West Virginia who works a minimum wage job to afford gas and insurance for his car, has an underpaid mother and an underemployed father, and whose only pathways to a middle class standard of living are risking his life bolting roofs in a coal mine or getting shipped off to some godforsaken Islamic country in hopes that if he makes it back Uncle Sam will pay for some of his schooling afterwards, is going to respond to something like this? "White privilege? What privilege?!"
I agree. It's ridiculous a society would view a West Virginia white teenager as "privileged" but a middle class/upper-class black kid as the son of two professionals is a victim.