JimC wrote:Seth wrote:
There is no aristocracy or hereditary rights that privilege one person or family above another, it's a meritocracy where anyone at all can play the game and win if they have it in them to do so.
Problem is, in reality (as opposed to the fantasy capitalism you described) there
are real barriers.
Of course there are barriers. There's incompetence, stupidity, ignorance, laziness, cupidity, greed, and all manner of personal failings and incapacities that people have to overcome in order to be successful. So what? That's how life is. You have to overcome your inadequacies and fears in order to prevail and succeed. It's the struggle against inadequacy that makes us better people, which is one of the keys to success. Nobody said it was easy, and those who are lazy or afraid will live their lives in mediocrity and will not reap the rewards of courage and risk. And that's just how it should be. The mediocre take no risks and live their lives in mediocrity and the courageous prevail and are rewarded.
When you reward mediocrity, you just get more mediocrity, and that's not how society advances, that's how it decays and is destroyed. If you want to be mediocre, that's fine, but you don't get to enjoy the rewards that come to those who work hard and put themselves at risk.
Sure, they are not the old ones of class,
And that's what's important. The barriers are barriers created by the abilities or inadequacies of the individual, and if they can overcome their inadequacies, they can succeed.
and a certain number of people do achieve great wealth and power from humble beginnings.
Ipse dixit, quod erat demonstrandum.
But you missed the essence of my point, which was a statistical one.
I didn't miss it, I ignored it. There will be a bell-curve of economic and social status no matter what because there are some people who are doers and some people who aren't, and those who aren't don't deserve to enjoy the same economic and social benefits that accrue to those who work hard to achieve success. If you give economic success to people who haven't earned it, they won't value it, they will fritter it away, and they will end up right back where they were to begin with, or worse. And the only way you can do that anyway is to steal what SOMEONE ELSE has earned in order to gift it to the inadequate, who don't deserve it because they haven't earned it for themselves.
It is simply more likely that the children of wealthy parents will gain the required qualifications, or be apponted to the best jobs.
So what? Would you have the incompetent, slothful, indolent and inadequate running things? They tried that in the USSR. Didn't work, did it?
Both the money available and the networking of their parents will tend to achieve that.
So what? They are the best qualified and everyone benefits when the qualified and competent run things, as opposed to the unqualified and incompetent.
My response is modest, and would no doubt be sneered at by the dogmatic left; simply provide more opportunities for higher education to capable students from disadvantaged backgrounds, to bring the reality a little closer to your meritocratic fantasy...
I'm fine with giving those from disadvantaged backgrounds educational opportunities, but ONLY those who are willing to work hard to prove that they are worth the investment. I do not agree that merely because someone comes from an economically disadvantaged (or even the scion of the economically advantaged) that they are worthy of public investment in their futures. We have to have a weeding-out process that reserves our higher education facilities for those who both deserve them and are willing to work hard to take advantage of the gift and not waste it.
For one thing, I'd boot ANY college student who gets caught intoxicated on anything right out on his or her ass without a second thought. I'd also boot out anyone who cannot maintain a C average at all times. The below-average student has no business consuming valuable college educational resources and needs to transfer to a trade school and learn to be a plumber or electrician or bus driver instead.
And I wouldn't admit to college anyone that has less than a 3.5 GPA coming out of high school, because a lower score shows an incapacity and lack of aptitude for paying attention to the importance of a free public education, and we don't need ingrates and lazy slobs in our colleges.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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