I get a pain in the back of my neck.
Clinging On...the middle class declines on Tuesday 3rd Feb
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Anna
Originally posted by french frank View PostBingo! I felt that was the sole important point - which makes no allowance for people being retired and on (relatively) low incomes - but also having lower outgoings (mortgages, children to support &c).
Anyway, it's a quiz not to be taken seriously and, to quote Margaret Thatcher: "Class is a Communist concept. It groups people as bundles, and sets them against one another."
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Originally posted by Anna View PostExactly - or people who are content to earn enough for their needs and live simple lives! If I tweak my finances/property value, and whether I use facebook, I can be a social climber and end up as a Technical Elite! David Beckham is enormously rich - but isn't he still working class?
Anyway, it's a quiz not to be taken seriously and, to quote Margaret Thatcher: "Class is a Communist concept. It groups people as bundles, and sets them against one another."
And then there's the basketball stars of the USA - mainly working class in origin and mainly Afro-American.
Do soccer players/basketball stars peer groups change? Do they become more educated? Do they listen to opera?
They all have considerable control over their employment, particularly when they finish their playing days.
But somehow, it's not difficult to view David Beckham as a working class bloke.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThere was a very well put-together talk by Byron Criddle [?]It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostDo soccer players/basketball stars peer groups change? Do they become more educated? Do they listen to opera?
They all have considerable control over their employment, particularly when they finish their playing days.
But somehow, it's not difficult to view David Beckham as a working class bloke.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Anna
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThere was a very well put-together talk by Byron Criddle [?] on Broadcasting House, R4, this morning....approx 32 minutes from the strart. It was about Welsh mining communities, but touched on educational and social aspiration.http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b050y8v6#auto
According to our local historians some of the lectures may have been hard going with a programme of 1892/3, a selection being: Drink Work & Wages, The Queens English, The Family Circle, The Solar System, French Salons, Fossils, Egypt, The War of The Roses and Cathedrals In Britain. (sorry, very off topic)
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Originally posted by french frank View PostComes back to my point about culture. There are so many ways young people (i.e. mainly young men) can earn fortunes before they are in middle age - sport, popular music, internet/software based businesses. Some academic disciplines (notably maths) have young 'prodigies' - but they don't usually make much money ...
I think that your reference to gender is instructive in understanding this subject properly.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostJust listened to that (presume it was aimed at me because of family's past as coal miners?) Apart from Chapel assisting in education there were the Working Men's Institutes, we have one here - no longer used for that purpose - founded by the local gentry in late 1880s to provide a library and help with reading for the working class. A song which was sung at each general meeting was:- "Hurrah for the men who work!"
According to our local historians some of the lectures may have been hard going with a programme of 1892/3, a selection being: Drink Work & Wages, The Queens English, The Family Circle, The Solar System, French Salons, Fossils, Egypt, The War of The Roses and Cathedrals In Britain. (sorry, very off topic)
I have, in the same vein, a 2-vol work from the Library of Entertaining [sic!] Knowledge entitled The Hindoos, published in 1834 [Chapter I: General Description of India] ...
There is a list of the committee members, headed by The Right Hon.The Lord Chancellor.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Just listened to that (presume it was aimed at me because of family's past as coal miners?) Apart from Chapel assisting in education there were the Working Men's Institutes, we have one here - no longer used for that purpose - founded by the local gentry in late 1880s to provide a library and help with reading for the working class. A song which was sung at each general meeting was:- "Hurrah for the men who work!"
According to our local historians some of the lectures may have been hard going with a programme of 1892/3, a selection being: Drink Work & Wages, The Queens English, The Family Circle, The Solar System, French Salons, Fossils, Egypt, The War of The Roses and Cathedrals In Britain. (sorry, very off topic)
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