Spinning off from the UK politics thread as requested.
Convo so far:
Things I, as an outsider, feel are confusing about the British class system:
a) The insistence on calling upper class people "middle class", thus conflating very well off people with people who are just above the working class in terms of financial security
b) The discourse around the cultural component of class - I understand your lived experience doesn't vanish into thin air once you graduate into making a bit more money but there's so many fucking millionaires in this country who say they're working class. Don't think people would put it like that elsewhere - you'd still have salt of the earth posturing, but millionaires in Portugal trying to do this would talk about having come from the working class and made a name for themselves, not claiming to actually be working class currently.
Sorry if these points seem disingenous. It often feels to me like much as the UK is accused of being obsessed about class so much of the chat around it feels straight up designed to obfuscate the material conditions of class.
― Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 26 October 2022 09:57 (two hours ago) bookmarkflaglink
nah there's a lot of complicated stuff that doesn't get thought thru in general conversation, or maybe even theorised that much
you get a lot of edge cases at the upper limit of working class/lower limit of middle class - shopkeepers, "skilled" manual workers, trades, nurses, coppers, all sorts
imo a classical marxist conception of proletarian probably incorporates a majority of people who consider themselves middle class in 21st century UK which doesn't help either
there's convos to be had and self-analysis to be done and i only think it's an issue when people make sweeping statements, or try to exclude somebody's class experience based on arbitrary markers, or just plain cosplays being working class cos they think we're fucking stupid
― saigo no ice cream (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 October 2022 10:05 (two hours ago) bookmarkflaglink
example of arbitrary markers - i generally had no concept of my class background until i attended university and met a bunch of people with vastly different backgrounds and experiences to my own. and i still remember the time somebody told me i couldn't be working class simply by dint of being at university. so sometimes the chips get carved deep into your shoulders
― saigo no ice cream (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 October 2022 10:06 (two hours ago) bookmarkflaglink
but it might be better to use another thread if we're gonna have an involved conversation about this. i don't think i have lots to add except that shit is complex and fraught with a lack of honesty
― saigo no ice cream (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 October 2022 10:08 (two hours ago) bookmarkflaglink
one interesting thing abt this (inc.a minor correction downthread) is actually how consistent it is across c.80 years (also lol eden premiership vmic)
― mark s, Wednesday, 26 October 2022 10:37 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
i've come to the conclusion over time that banning private education would be one of the most cost effective radical acts any elected government could carry out
― saigo no ice cream (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 October 2022 10:44 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
(i wd quickly add that while c.7% may indeed attend a private school countrywide, the sliver of this that attends a private school delivering anything like the full access effect we're discussing is distinctly smaller. the gradient of private schools "good" down to "genuinely bad" is also sharp (tho probably not as sharp as it was back in st trinians times, when that 7% would i think be on the small side). it's not much use merely to have attended A.N.Other private schools: to feel the benefit in question it will need to be one from a quite select subset of same)
― mark s, Wednesday, 26 October 2022 10:46 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
xps the main reason we call some rich people middle class is that we still have an actual aristocracy but it gets a little muddled with aristos doing capitalist shit and new money types who might be richer than them but are excluded from certain old boys networks or whatever. I don't know how it all works
the suspicion about obfuscation of material conditions is absolutely correct though. the same fucking people who spent the 90s/00s mocking and attacking anyone who mentioned class for being out of touch extremists who were envious of success are now the ones leaning hardest into this class authenticity policing stuff which is entirely based on cultural signifiers detached from any materiality. such that st george's flag waving business owners somehow become more authentically working class than the migrant workers they exploit. and actual class politics is still met with utter hostility
― your original display name is still visible (Left), Wednesday, 26 October 2022 10:46 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
i appreciate the picture's more complicated than that mark and i think our entire education system needs blowing up and starting again, but the simplest line to draw to take that element of privilege out of the system would be a ban on private education i think. i know that would leave a lot of knots to be worked out
― saigo no ice cream (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 October 2022 10:49 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
yes i shd have said xp: it wasn't posted to push back against yr point at all NV, just to open up the internals of that 7% (since i think the relevant percentage in terms of this very specific issue is in fact even smaller)
as to yr proposed ban of private education, i entirely agree
― mark s, Wednesday, 26 October 2022 10:54 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
it's a fair point, like looking at the rise of university students without accounting for Oxbridge as the dominant factor in high office
― saigo no ice cream (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 October 2022 10:58 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
i do sometimes wonder if a drive against private education could partly be built from the fact that much of its down-tier operation is actually incredibly terrible and most ppl paying for it are being ripped off
but if they hired me to fashion messages and wedge issues for my kind of politics it wd simply mean even more ppl saying "watdafuk he on abt now"
― mark s, Wednesday, 26 October 2022 10:58 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
i feel like - no memory just vibes as per usual - when Labour in opposition has floated anti private education policy the backlash from the electorate as a whole has not been significant? removing private education kinda feels achievable to me, probly right up to the point where it actually isn't lol
of course the muddy waters of class and the broader snobbery that engenders are percolated right thru the whole education system, hence league tables and local biases towards "good" and "bad" schools. the notion of education to "better yourself" feels just as soaked into the working class left as anywhere else to me and probably has been since at least when Dickie Attenborough did that film about being an oik in a brave new meritocracy
― saigo no ice cream (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 October 2022 11:02 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
the chapter on class in Kate Fox's "Watching The English" is a good primer on the way it works here, which is not the same as in other countries or in Marxist theory
― link.exposing.politically (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Wednesday, 26 October 2022 11:03 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Guinea_Pig_(film)
think stuff like this was directly responsible for Powell and Pressburger losing their fucking minds
― saigo no ice cream (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 October 2022 11:07 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
what does "35% went through a pipeline from private school to Oxford or Cambridge University" mean in that tweet up there? (the pipeline bit)
― fetter, Wednesday, 26 October 2022 11:12 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
in general it means there's that a well established well-trod route: viz in this case possibly from a specific set of such schools who select and steer some pupils towards this route, to a specific set of university subjects studied (mainly PPE, to a specific set of SPAD-hiring outcomes?
(truer answer: i don't actually know and ^^^is a guess)
― mark s, Wednesday, 26 October 2022 11:26 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
― Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 26 October 2022 12:30 (seven months ago) link
a) The insistence on calling upper class people "middle class", thus conflating very well off people with people who are just above the working class in terms of financial security
It would totally make sense to split the population into thirds by wealth, or at least have the top 10% be upper class or something. But yeah, Britain is still wary of using the term "upper class" for anyone but those with aristocratic connections. There is a grey area with very posh people who don't seem to be connected to a hereditary title. And of course British people don't agree among themselves about class labels.
― Alba, Wednesday, 26 October 2022 12:02 (twenty-four minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
I think the distinctions, though they may once have mattered, are increasingly obfuscatory to how wealth and power now operate
There’s the 1% and there’s the rest of us imo
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 26 October 2022 12:05 (twenty-one minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
the top tier upper/middle division tends to come down to ownership of land, mostly pre Industrial Revolution/late 18th century
like everything else in this soup it's nonsenical up to the point where it does actually tell you something about manners/attitudes/politics/self ID
the 18th century bourgeoisie marrying itself to the landed aristos is a big part of the industrial revolution because both sides had stuff to gain
that division is less important 200-odd years later of course EXCEPT TO THE KIND OF PEOPLE TO WHOM ITS ACTUALLY STILL REALLY IMPORTANT
― saigo no ice cream (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 October 2022 12:06 (twenty-one minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
but yes that wasn't an argument with you Trace, most difference it might make to me is order of the guillotine/gulag/re-education queue, which ultimately will be down to the queuers themselves
― saigo no ice cream (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 October 2022 12:07 (nineteen minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
it does still give you little clues about why different groups of Tories are weird/snobbish about each other tho
― saigo no ice cream (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 October 2022 12:08 (eighteen minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
― Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 26 October 2022 12:30 (seven months ago) link