by oddasudda » Fri Aug 16, 2002 9:32 pm
I went to state schools for nine years of my life and learned nothing that I would need for life. Although this was long before I became an anarchist, I began to question arbitrary authority. Soon enough, I was standing up to my teachers and refusing to take their abuse, and I was also getting other kids to boost their self-esteem, as well. Needless to say, I wasn't happy.
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<br>Thanks to luck and some good grades, a private school offered to accept me with nearly full tuition. It turned out that I wouldn't be spending much more money there than I would be had I stayed at public school. Interestingly enough, it was my choice; my parents raised me in a libertarian fashion. Without fully understanding the consequences, I decided to go.
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<br>Of course, it changed my life. I discovered that what I had previously viewed as "rich" was nothing compared to what I was to learn to adapt to. In fact, I never truly did fully adapt to it. After being at home for a long time, meeting friends from private school or visiting the school depresses me and can even make me sick to my stomach. In order to deal with the situation, I developed a rather sarcastic sense of humor; the only way to begin to deal with the gaping disparity between myself and my peers was to laugh at it. I still do.
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<br>You have to understand that many lower-class people that have experience with the elite will obviously harbor anger, contempt, and even hatred. To take that feeling from them would take away what little they have left when dealing with the upper echelons of society. It is a healthy reaction to disillusionment. If I never went to private school, I probably wouldn't be an anarchist right now because I wouldn't fully understand the infinite distance between the rich and the poor. We're talking completely different worlds, here.
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<br>Despite the fact that I am grateful for the opportunity I received, I still hold deep contempt for the school. People of the upper-class should not be shocked when they feel anger from working-class people. It's a natural reaction, albeit a complex psychological situation. The amount of betrayal, shame, humiliation, pride, hurt, and sadness involved in the realization of disparity certainly are enough to breed complex feelings of contempt. It doesn't mean that all rich people are hated, it just means that most working-people don't trust them, which is perfectly healthy in my opinion.