Originally posted by Lateralthinking1
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The long boat game
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by Vile Consort View PostThen what did you mean when you said that "Oxford and Cambridge dish out firsts and 2:1s like smarties"? You must have worded your statement very poorly if you meant something else.
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Originally posted by Vile Consort View PostThen what did you mean when you said that "Oxford and Cambridge dish out firsts and 2:1s like smarties"? You must have worded your statement very poorly if you meant something else.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostAnd that is interesting too. It shows that different universities are the best for different courses and raises questions about how polytechnics that became universities can ever catch up in respect of reputation.
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"Hardcore acousmatic music" ? Birmingham , though it probably wont get you fast tracked in Whitehall !
People will always be automatically impressed with Oxbridge degrees , there's FA one can do about that and if it suits you then it's a good option.
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was the chap singling out Oxbridge for elitist tendencies or protesting the prevalence of elitism in Britain more generally with the Boat Race a rather good point of protest? since it is being watched by a load of U people etc .... .... and on telly ....
very heated lunch with sprog and swmbo still in hanging and flogging mindsets .... a real spoilsport would be the politest equivalent to their views of said chapAccording to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWhat about replying to Lateralthinking1's sympathetic point about your poor chances of getting the sort of preferential treatment accorded the likes of Ian Botham?
The business with the elephant was a high-profile charity walk wasn't it, not a race between me and another nobody on unicycles. In any case, the "privilege" of a road closure was surely not granted to him personally but to the charities he was raising money for. Of course big events can obtain road closures, and me and my mate wanting to lark about can't. That's not elitism, it's just common sense.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by Vile Consort View PostI was ignoring it because it is utterly irrelevant. Botham doesn't get that treatment because he was born into a wealthy family (he wasn't) or because he went to Oxbridge (he didn't) nor even because he went to a public school (he didn't). So where does elitism come into it?
However, the difficulty I have with the boat race is in its symbolism of the kind of elitism that wallows in exclusivity and still has an archaic hold in the corridors of power. This in turn shapes the systems, influences policy and puts up walls between them and us whenever such things are questioned. What does it say too about open competition which it is claimed this country promotes?
I can understand how the protester yesterday could be viewed as a spoilsport. There is an innocuous level to the race. Arguably he wasn't the ideal person to trigger constructive questioning. That said, the dismissing of him by the press as a nutcase, with focus on his weak spots, has a shivering effect on me. I thought that we had moved as a society a bit above that kind of thing.Last edited by Guest; 08-04-12, 17:55.
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Surely Botham is an example of somebody using their celebrity to further good causes. Elitism is people getting rewards on the basis of [i]irrelevant[I] considerations such as social class or which school or university they went to, especially where the person didn't make any contribution towards such considerations. In doing a charity walk, he isn't getting a reward at all - he's giving, not taking.
Oh and by the way, do you (LateralThinking1) think that the external examiners from other universities collude in the fraudulent marking system that you claim is perpetrated at Oxbridge?
ETA: I had better stop posting now because I have started drinking, and I usually make a complete pratt of myself when I post whilst in my cups (if I haven't already). You may imagine that, being an Oxbridge graduate, I have sent my butler to select a rather expensive bottle (say £4,000) from my extensive reserves and I am now enjoying it in the finest lead crystal. Yeah ... I'm imagining that, too.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View Postthe assumptions acquired at Oxbridge don't later serve the general public well.
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Simon
Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View Post
I agree with those who say that the tradition should be kept but that it should be a final between the best of universities.
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