hrothgar, on 2017-December-15, 13:15, said:
I've always admitted to being highly privileged.
Born in the US in the late 60s...
You don't get much more privileged than that...
College professors for parents.
I got to take college level classes starting in middle school
Raised in Poughkeepsie NY. Nice little enclave of IBMers and college types who were willing to invest heavily in public education.
Graduated near the top of my class from places like MIT and Wesleyan without a penny of student debt
***** yeah, I'm privileged and I know it... That why I feel so strongly about public education and the like. So other people have the same opportunities that I did.
At the same time, I'm not disconnected enough from what its like to work for a living to be talking about pension plans in 2018...
I am going to add my variant on this, since I think this issue of privilege needs to be though about correctly.
[quote name='hrothgar' timestamp='1513365329' post='940569']
I've always admitted to being highly privileged.
Same here!
Born in the US in the late 60s...
You don't get much more privileged than that...
Change 60s to 1939 for me, then again I agree.
College professors for parents.
I got to take college level classes starting in middle school
Here is where we diverge, but this is not at all a complaint. My father was an immigrant, his parents were dead by the time he was 12, his older brother helped him finish elementary school, then he went to work. He installed weatherstripping. My mother ran away from home when she was 14 or so. They had a tough life. I had a childhood that I look back on with pleasure. I feel very privileged to have had the childhood I had. Rich? Hardly. But you donn't have to be. Security is very important. being rich isn't. Learning? I bought George Gamoy's One Two Three Infinity when I was 13 and started reading Scientific American. When I was 16, in the summer, I sat in on a Physics class at the University of Minnesota. No charge. And Pauk Rosenbloom gave Saturday lectures on mathematics for those crazy kids like me who were interested. Sidebar: A young and not very tactful visitor to the U once commented about the tragedy of the brilliant Rosenbloom putting all of his energy into education. James Serrin responded "Yes, Paul used to be ten years ahead of everyone else, now he is only five years ahead of everyone else". But cars were a big part of my adolescence. I turned 15 on Han 1, got my learner's permit on Jan 2, got my license in March, bought a car, a 47 Plymouth, in April. Working on cars, mine and others, was a big part of my life.
Raised in Poughkeepsie NY. Nice little enclave of IBMers and college types who were willing to invest heavily in public education.
The Twin Cities in Minnesota was wonderful in the 40s and 50s. When I was 13 my friend Roger and I tool a bike trip up along the St. Croix river, a few days on our own. Two tears later, after I bought the car, we took a road trip. It is absolutely not necessary to be born to wealth to have a memorable childhood/adolescence.
Graduated near the top of my class from places like MIT and Wesleyan without a penny of student debt
Well, I graduated!. I had a tendency to do what I wanted, and not do what I didn't want to. I failed one class that was easy but boring. I never came. I did fine on the exams but the instructor gave a daily attendance quiz, 10 points a shot. He could have turned in my F by Thanksgiving. I did the same in some other classes but there they gave me a break as long as I did well on the exams. Once in the student union, after an exam, I was telling a friend about how a problem I couldn't solve. The instructor, who i did not recognize, was standing nearby. "You should come to class, you would learn how to solve problems like that". Of course other classes I liked. Some I really liked. Mathematics of Fluid Flow (Hugh Turritin) . History and Philosophy of Religion (Paul Holmer). These are a couple of the many I really liked. John Berryman was a nut but he was also great.
***** yeah, I'm privileged and I know it... That why I feel so strongly about public education and the like. So other people have the same opportunities that I did.
And we are in complete agreement here. I don't care if you are a liberal or a conservative, or what you think about cultural issues, is it not completely obvious that everyone benefits when young people have an opportunity? And opportunity starts with a secure childhood and access to education. This is clear to everyone, is it not?
At the same time, I'm not disconnected enough from what its like to work for a living to be talking about pension plans in 2018...
Here is what I really want to get at in this maybe overly long post. We get entirely too hung up on the 1 percent issue. It is absolutely not necessary, or in my opinion even particularly important, to be at the top of the wealth ladder. My parents bought me a set of socket wrenches for my 16th birthday. A phonograph for my 13th, with 3 LPs. Stan Kenton, Billy May and a third one. This was very nice and I remember it 60 plus years later. Security, education, opportunity. That's where it's at. From a Loretta Lynn song "They say to have her hair done Liz flies all the way to France". Let her. It's ok. Carly does my hair. Nearby, and she does a good job.
Sorry if I have gone over the top with this, but I regard the issue as important.