Can someone tell what is wrong with elitism?

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AnObscureName

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#1 AnObscureName
Member since 2008 • 2069 Posts

It has bothered me for a while, especially involving education. The media uses this word whenever a school or university refuses to accept people below a certain standard. I have no idea how this is meant to do anything. Isn't that the point? To give the moe intelligent a better enviroment to work in and cleverer peers with which to work?

I am actually on of those people that supports the idea that in an election some people's votes should count for more than others.

Shouldn't a person with a degree in economics or in politics or who knows something about how a country is run have more say in the running than say a brick-layer who left school at 16 with no qualifications?

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stupid4

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#2 stupid4
Member since 2008 • 3695 Posts
I agree. I hate it when people think lowly of me because I go to Brown. What is wrong with going to a good expensive private school?
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deactivated-5e836a855beb2

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#3 deactivated-5e836a855beb2
Member since 2005 • 95573 Posts
No. Elitists are lame. And just because you know something doesn't mean you'll make the correct decision.
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vidplayer8

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#4 vidplayer8
Member since 2006 • 18549 Posts

Inequality?

I don't know.

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SGT4EVA

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#5 SGT4EVA
Member since 2007 • 1773 Posts

It has bothered me for a while, especially involving education. The media uses this word whenever a school or university refuses to accept people below a certain standard. I have no idea how this is meant to do anything. Isn't that the point? To give the moe intelligent a better enviroment to work in and cleverer peers with which to work?

I am actually on of those people that supports the idea that in an election some people's votes should count for more than others.

Shouldn't a person with a degree in economics or in politics or who knows something about how a country is run have more say in the running than say a brick-layer who left school at 16 with no qualifications?

AnObscureName
lmfaooo i cant take you seriously with that Horse in your signature! its hilarious lmfaoooo! but in all seriousness im not sure exactly what you need and i apologize.
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fat_rob

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#6 fat_rob
Member since 2003 • 22624 Posts
Elitist own :)
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Meeeko

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#7 Meeeko
Member since 2008 • 635 Posts
I wish I could become an elitist. Could anyone help me out with this? :(
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Devour2Survive

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#8 Devour2Survive
Member since 2008 • 782 Posts
Eh....look what happened in Nazi Germany.
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swizz-the-gamer

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#9 swizz-the-gamer
Member since 2005 • 8801 Posts
No I hate Elitism, everyone should have the same opportunities. Your just perpetuating the class system and and oppression of the working class. I bricklayer who left school at 16 has as much right to decide how his country is run as a professor, a brick layer may vote for different reasons. He may vote Labour because they promise new parks in his area for his children. Whereas your intellectual genius elite who i'm sure you profess to be may vote conservative for some other far more important reason. Each has as much right to vote and no vote should be worth more than another.
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AnObscureName

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#10 AnObscureName
Member since 2008 • 2069 Posts
No I hate Elitism, everyone should have the same opportunities. Your just perpetuating the class system and and oppression of the working class. I bricklayer who left school at 16 has as much right to decide how his country is run as a professor, a brick layer may vote for different reasons. He may vote Labour because they promise new parks in his area for his children. Whereas your intellectual genius elite who i'm sure you profess to be may vote conservative for some other far more important reason. Each has as much right to vote and no vote should be worth more than another. swizz-the-gamer
Yes everyone should have the same opportunities but why then should a university or school have to lower it's standard to let in more student's from "deprived areas".
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swizz-the-gamer

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#11 swizz-the-gamer
Member since 2005 • 8801 Posts
[QUOTE="swizz-the-gamer"]No I hate Elitism, everyone should have the same opportunities. Your just perpetuating the class system and and oppression of the working class. I bricklayer who left school at 16 has as much right to decide how his country is run as a professor, a brick layer may vote for different reasons. He may vote Labour because they promise new parks in his area for his children. Whereas your intellectual genius elite who i'm sure you profess to be may vote conservative for some other far more important reason. Each has as much right to vote and no vote should be worth more than another. AnObscureName
Yes everyone should have the same opportunities but why then should a university or school have to lower it's standard to let in more student's from "deprived areas".

Are you kidding me? Thats how a society improves! Giving those from poorer areas the same opportunities as those from richer areas will slowly bridge the gap between classes and end the cycle of the poor underachieving. A society cannot be improved by giving the best education to a rich majority, and then their children and then their children's children while the proletariat is forced into worse schools and never allowed to improve intellectually.
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AirGuitarist87

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#12 AirGuitarist87
Member since 2006 • 9499 Posts
There's a difference in what you're saying. Elitists set irrational irrelevant standards, for example your word doesn't mean anything unless you've been to X Uni, whereas the other example you gave with the bricklayer is rational selectivity.
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AirGuitarist87

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#13 AirGuitarist87
Member since 2006 • 9499 Posts
[QUOTE="AnObscureName"] Yes everyone should have the same opportunities but why then should a university or school have to lower it's standard to let in more student's from "deprived areas".

I may be reading that wrong, but you seem to be suggesting that poor people aren't very intelligent.
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AnObscureName

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#14 AnObscureName
Member since 2008 • 2069 Posts
[QUOTE="AirGuitarist87"][QUOTE="AnObscureName"] Yes everyone should have the same opportunities but why then should a university or school have to lower it's standard to let in more student's from "deprived areas".

I may be reading that wrong, but you seem to be suggesting that poor people aren't very intelligent.

No I am suggesting that it is wrong to accept poorer people for the sake of having poorer people in the better universities.
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swizz-the-gamer

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#15 swizz-the-gamer
Member since 2005 • 8801 Posts
[QUOTE="AnObscureName"] Yes everyone should have the same opportunities but why then should a university or school have to lower it's standard to let in more student's from "deprived areas". AirGuitarist87
I may be reading that wrong, but you seem to be suggesting that poor people aren't very intelligent.

It's clearly what the thinks, he's raised himself on some intellectual pedestal and is sitting there judging the proles.
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GabuEx

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#16 GabuEx
Member since 2006 • 36552 Posts

An elitist generally isn't someone who just happens to be more intelligent or more capable than others or whatnot; it's someone who uses that fact to assert that he or she is in some way better than those who aren't and is deserving of special treatment as a result. Elitists also tend to believe that there is a fundamental divide between "them" and "us" and that people should be treated with disdain who try to cross that divide.

None of this is particularly conducive to a functioning society.

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swizz-the-gamer

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#17 swizz-the-gamer
Member since 2005 • 8801 Posts
[QUOTE="AirGuitarist87"][QUOTE="AnObscureName"] Yes everyone should have the same opportunities but why then should a university or school have to lower it's standard to let in more student's from "deprived areas". AnObscureName
I may be reading that wrong, but you seem to be suggesting that poor people aren't very intelligent.

No I am suggesting that it is wrong to accept poorer people for the sake of having poorer people in the better universities.

I already explain that, you didn't respond.
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AnObscureName

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#18 AnObscureName
Member since 2008 • 2069 Posts
[QUOTE="AirGuitarist87"][QUOTE="AnObscureName"] Yes everyone should have the same opportunities but why then should a university or school have to lower it's standard to let in more student's from "deprived areas". swizz-the-gamer
I may be reading that wrong, but you seem to be suggesting that poor people aren't very intelligent.

It's clearly what the thinks, he's raised himself on some intellectual pedestal and is sitting there judging the proles.

Where did you get that impression? I'll admit, maybe I was wrong about voting, but I stand by my view that universities shouldn't have to lower standard's just to accept poorer people.
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AirGuitarist87

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#19 AirGuitarist87
Member since 2006 • 9499 Posts

[QUOTE="AirGuitarist87"][QUOTE="AnObscureName"] Yes everyone should have the same opportunities but why then should a university or school have to lower it's standard to let in more student's from "deprived areas". AnObscureName
I may be reading that wrong, but you seem to be suggesting that poor people aren't very intelligent.

No I am suggesting that it is wrong to accept poorer people for the sake of having poorer people in the better universities.

Have you thought that they might be accepting poorer people because they have the intellectual capacity to achieve at higher education? Your financial background isn't that much of a factor on your intelligence. If these poor people can't handle university then they would drop out and (presumingly) not be able to pay their tuition fees because they're no longer in education, thus making the universities out of pocket by around 3,000 Pound Sterling.

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#20 swizz-the-gamer
Member since 2005 • 8801 Posts
[QUOTE="swizz-the-gamer"][QUOTE="AirGuitarist87"] I may be reading that wrong, but you seem to be suggesting that poor people aren't very intelligent.AnObscureName
It's clearly what the thinks, he's raised himself on some intellectual pedestal and is sitting there judging the proles.

Where did you get that impression? I'll admit, maybe I was wrong about voting, but I stand by my view that universities shouldn't have to lower standard's just to accept poorer people.

Where did I get that impression? Everything you've been saying, what you just said!By implication poor people arent as smart as rich people. This is clearly false. Why would a university have to lower standards to accept poor people? Perhaps they would have to lower tuition fee's but not standards of intelligence. If they were really so stupid as you seem to believe, they would drop out. Is there a working class person in one of your classes or something? Annoyed they come from a poorer background and ended up at the same place you did?
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AnObscureName

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#21 AnObscureName
Member since 2008 • 2069 Posts

[QUOTE="AnObscureName"][QUOTE="AirGuitarist87"] I may be reading that wrong, but you seem to be suggesting that poor people aren't very intelligent.AirGuitarist87

No I am suggesting that it is wrong to accept poorer people for the sake of having poorer people in the better universities.

Have you thought that they might be accepting poorer people because they have the intellectual capacity to achieve at higher education? Your financial background isn't that much of a factor on your intelligence. If these poor people can't handle university then they would drop out and (presumingly) not be able to pay their tuition fees because they're no longer in education, thus making the universities out of pocket by around 3,000 Pound Sterling.

Yes and I am all for accepting people from poorer backgrounds if they have the intellectual capacity. I object as I have said many times already to lowering the entry requirements purely to accept poorer people.
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NecroKvltMuffin

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#22 NecroKvltMuffin
Member since 2007 • 9334 Posts
Is it ok if I'm a metal elitist?
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#23 foxhound_fox
Member since 2005 • 98532 Posts
Nothing is wrong with elitism. Far too many people confuse it with arrogance.

We should strive to only accept the best from everyone. Why would we not send our best and most "elite" athletes to the Olympics? Why would we not want our smartest and most qualified scientists researching new medical treatments?

Thinking "I'm better than you because of X" is not elitism, it is just plain stupidity and arrogance. Some people are more qualified than others to do certain things, that does not make them an overall "better person."
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swizz-the-gamer

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#24 swizz-the-gamer
Member since 2005 • 8801 Posts
[QUOTE="AirGuitarist87"]

[QUOTE="AnObscureName"] No I am suggesting that it is wrong to accept poorer people for the sake of having poorer people in the better universities. AnObscureName

Have you thought that they might be accepting poorer people because they have the intellectual capacity to achieve at higher education? Your financial background isn't that much of a factor on your intelligence. If these poor people can't handle university then they would drop out and (presumingly) not be able to pay their tuition fees because they're no longer in education, thus making the universities out of pocket by around 3,000 Pound Sterling.

Yes and I am all for accepting people from poorer backgrounds if they have the intellectual capacity. I object as I have said many times already to lowering the entry requirements purely to accept poorer people.

Why? For instance, if a math prodigy has gone to very poor schools, have not been supported by their parents and have not had the tools they require they may have achieved badly purely do to that should they not be at the point of adulthood given better opportunities?
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AnObscureName

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#25 AnObscureName
Member since 2008 • 2069 Posts
[QUOTE="AnObscureName"][QUOTE="AirGuitarist87"]

Have you thought that they might be accepting poorer people because they have the intellectual capacity to achieve at higher education? Your financial background isn't that much of a factor on your intelligence. If these poor people can't handle university then they would drop out and (presumingly) not be able to pay their tuition fees because they're no longer in education, thus making the universities out of pocket by around 3,000 Pound Sterling.

swizz-the-gamer
Yes and I am all for accepting people from poorer backgrounds if they have the intellectual capacity. I object as I have said many times already to lowering the entry requirements purely to accept poorer people.

Why? For instance, if a math prodigy has gone to very poor schools, have not been supported by their parents and have not had the tools they require they may have achieved badly purely do to that should they not be at the point of adulthood given better opportunities?

In that situation how would anyone know he was a maths prodigy?
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swizz-the-gamer

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#26 swizz-the-gamer
Member since 2005 • 8801 Posts
[QUOTE="swizz-the-gamer"][QUOTE="AnObscureName"] Yes and I am all for accepting people from poorer backgrounds if they have the intellectual capacity. I object as I have said many times already to lowering the entry requirements purely to accept poorer people.AnObscureName
Why? For instance, if a math prodigy has gone to very poor schools, have not been supported by their parents and have not had the tools they require they may have achieved badly purely do to that should they not be at the point of adulthood given better opportunities?

In that situation how would anyone know he was a maths prodigy?

Could have achieved incredibly well in maths only.
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AirGuitarist87

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#27 AirGuitarist87
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Yes and I am all for accepting people from poorer backgrounds if they have the intellectual capacity. I object as I have said many times already to lowering the entry requirements purely to accept poorer people.AnObscureName
The only time I've heard of that happening is in America with something called "positive racism" where companies have to hire a certain number of ethnic minorities. I doubt universities do that because they're purely looking at your A Level results. Nowhere in the registration forms I signed to get into uni did it ask me about my family's income. The only time that came up was when applying for my student loan, which is provided by a separate company.
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AnObscureName

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#28 AnObscureName
Member since 2008 • 2069 Posts
[QUOTE="AnObscureName"][QUOTE="swizz-the-gamer"] Why? For instance, if a math prodigy has gone to very poor schools, have not been supported by their parents and have not had the tools they require they may have achieved badly purely do to that should they not be at the point of adulthood given better opportunities? swizz-the-gamer
In that situation how would anyone know he was a maths prodigy?

Could have achieved incredibly well in maths only.

I doubt a maths prodigy would do well in only maths. People who excel at maths also tend to excel at the sciences so I would guess he/she would do well in those as well.
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#29 AnObscureName
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[QUOTE="AnObscureName"]Yes and I am all for accepting people from poorer backgrounds if they have the intellectual capacity. I object as I have said many times already to lowering the entry requirements purely to accept poorer people.AirGuitarist87
The only time I've heard of that happening is in America with something called "positive racism" where companies have to hire a certain number of ethnic minorities. I doubt universities do that because they're purely looking at your A Level results. Nowhere in the registration forms I signed to get into uni did it ask me about my family's income. The only time that came up was when applying for my student loan, which is provided by a separate company.

I'm meaning things like this this.

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AirGuitarist87

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#30 AirGuitarist87
Member since 2006 • 9499 Posts

I'm meaning things like this this.

AnObscureName
But that isn't saying "let poor people in" it's saying there should be other ways of getting into university besides A Levels or "people from backgrounds without a history of going to college". This will never come to order as it negates the entire higher education system. If someone cannot handle A Levels then they won't be able to handle University, it's that simple, it has nothing to do with financial background.
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AnObscureName

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#31 AnObscureName
Member since 2008 • 2069 Posts
[QUOTE="AnObscureName"]

I'm meaning things like this this.

AirGuitarist87

But that isn't saying "let poor people in" it's saying there should be other ways of getting into university besides A Levels or "people from backgrounds without a history of going to college". This will never come to order as it negates the entire higher education system. If someone cannot handle A Levels then they won't be able to handle University, it's that simple, it has nothing to do with financial background.

These two are more to the point then.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/debates/2989338/Oxford-University-must-try-harder-to-recruit-deprived-students.html

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2602416/Britains-top-universities-favouring-the-poor.html

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#32 AirGuitarist87
Member since 2006 • 9499 Posts
[QUOTE="AirGuitarist87"][QUOTE="AnObscureName"]

I'm meaning things like this this.

AnObscureName

But that isn't saying "let poor people in" it's saying there should be other ways of getting into university besides A Levels or "people from backgrounds without a history of going to college". This will never come to order as it negates the entire higher education system. If someone cannot handle A Levels then they won't be able to handle University, it's that simple, it has nothing to do with financial background.

These two are more to the point then.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/debates/2989338/Oxford-University-must-try-harder-to-recruit-deprived-students.html

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2602416/Britains-top-universities-favouring-the-poor.html

The first one is kind of a no-brainer. Oxford is Britain's top university so of course they're going to be elitist, and with elitism comes criticism. The second one, I'll give you that but you have to recognise that they became a top university by getting good grades. If they took in people who weren't intelligent by the bucketful like the article suggests then their standing and therefore reputation will slide dramatically. Besides, I've never liked the Telegraph ;)
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#33 spark5050
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[QUOTE="AirGuitarist87"][QUOTE="AnObscureName"]

I'm meaning things like this this.

AnObscureName

But that isn't saying "let poor people in" it's saying there should be other ways of getting into university besides A Levels or "people from backgrounds without a history of going to college". This will never come to order as it negates the entire higher education system. If someone cannot handle A Levels then they won't be able to handle University, it's that simple, it has nothing to do with financial background.

These two are more to the point then.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/debates/2989338/Oxford-University-must-try-harder-to-recruit-deprived-students.html

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2602416/Britains-top-universities-favouring-the-poor.html

I agree with these sort of scheme as they encourage equality. Let me ask you this who is more intelligent the person who got AAA from a private school where there are classes of ten and the teachers basically do their coursework for them or someone from a comprehensive school who gets AAB. where the student really has to work to get the results
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#34 trylks
Member since 2005 • 1948 Posts

It is not fair if poor people cannot access a good education just because of being poor, and it isn't fair either if rich people can access it just for being rich. It isn't also fair to treat equally people that are not equal, and not all the people are equal, that's for sure.

People should get what they deserve and money is not a merit, to access education it should be proved that it is going to be well used, this means that it should be proved that the people accessing a higher/harder education should be clever enough to handle the concepts relative to that education, to prove this al the people should have the same opportunities, independently of race, economic situation, gender, etc.

In fact, people shouldn't vote, a commitee made of the experts in a matter should decide in that matter under some equality principles that guarantee that their decision is the best for the common good, and not biased towards their interest. In the end, if the ethical criteria (these principles) and the technical criteria (those related with the expertise of the people making the decision) are clear and specific enough (and they should be) the decision would consist merely on appliying these criteria, and it wouldn't matter who is the person applying them.

There are many politics in the world, and many people that are not politics but study subjects related with politics, they should create this criteria for once, with the shared effort it would be feasible, I have no doubt about it, and the world would be a much better place.

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#35 Meeeko
Member since 2008 • 635 Posts

Is it ok if I'm a metal elitist?NecroKvltMuffin

Teach me your ways. Mighty god of rock and roll. :)

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#36 pianist
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Nothing is wrong with elitism. Far too many people confuse it with arrogance.

We should strive to only accept the best from everyone. Why would we not send our best and most "elite" athletes to the Olympics? Why would we not want our smartest and most qualified scientists researching new medical treatments?

Thinking "I'm better than you because of X" is not elitism, it is just plain stupidity and arrogance. Some people are more qualified than others to do certain things, that does not make them an overall "better person."
foxhound_fox

Agreed. Good post!

It's rather ridiculous when people feel the need to apologize for simply being better equipped to understand a field than the majority, or when they are belittled as arrogant twits for asserting that truth to others. Ironically, arrogance is just as often found in those who know little about a field but feel that their uneducated opinion is every bit as valid as someone who knows a great deal about the field. So those who scream 'elitist' are often as arrogant as the people they accuse of elitism.

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#37 Meeeko
Member since 2008 • 635 Posts

[QUOTE="foxhound_fox"]Nothing is wrong with elitism. Far too many people confuse it with arrogance.

We should strive to only accept the best from everyone. Why would we not send our best and most "elite" athletes to the Olympics? Why would we not want our smartest and most qualified scientists researching new medical treatments?

Thinking "I'm better than you because of X" is not elitism, it is just plain stupidity and arrogance. Some people are more qualified than others to do certain things, that does not make them an overall "better person."
pianist

Agreed. Good post!

It's rather ridiculous when people feel the need to apologize for simply being better equipped to understand a field than the majority, or when they are belittled as arrogant twits for asserting that truth to others. Ironically, arrogance is just as often found in those who know little about a field but feel that their uneducated opinion is every bit as valid as someone who knows a great deal about the field. So those who scream 'elitist' are often as arrogant as the people they accuse of elitism.

Pianist,

Do you think the same line of thought works with MMORPG's as well?

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pianist

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#38 pianist
Member since 2003 • 18900 Posts

Pianist,

Do you think the same line of thought works with MMORPG's as well?

Meeeko

To be honest, I've never played one. The basic idea of the genre never much appealed to me, so I wouldn't know. Are you talking about people who look down on those who play them?

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obsolete2k1

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#39 obsolete2k1
Member since 2007 • 990 Posts
Eh....look what happened in Nazi Germany.Devour2Survive
what does elitism have to do with Nazi Germany? it was a general election that elected Hitler and he was a "man of the people" as he was not from an elite background/upbringing, and he always sought the support of the general public, albeit against certain groups but that did not make the general German-speaking public "elite" in regards to education, social standing, etc. If anything, it was the Jews who were the elitists, which is exactly what Hitler targeted... so is that your point? Are you saying that we shouldn't have elitists otherwise the dullards will rise up and gas them all? If that's the case, wow... you have an insane view of your society.
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BeepBoop16

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#40 BeepBoop16
Member since 2008 • 562 Posts

[QUOTE="AirGuitarist87"][QUOTE="AnObscureName"] Yes everyone should have the same opportunities but why then should a university or school have to lower it's standard to let in more student's from "deprived areas". AnObscureName
I may be reading that wrong, but you seem to be suggesting that poor people aren't very intelligent.

No I am suggesting that it is wrong to accept poorer people for the sake of having poorer people in the better universities.

If a poor person gets a B and a rich person gets an A, who is the most suited for the placement? We cannot tell because the rich person was in a better environment to get a higher grade. For all we know the poor person is the most intelligent and will be better suited to further education.

Sorry if that has already been said.

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stupid4

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#41 stupid4
Member since 2008 • 3695 Posts

[QUOTE="AnObscureName"][QUOTE="AirGuitarist87"] I may be reading that wrong, but you seem to be suggesting that poor people aren't very intelligent.BeepBoop16

No I am suggesting that it is wrong to accept poorer people for the sake of having poorer people in the better universities.

If a poor person gets a B and a rich person gets an A, who is the most suited for the placement? We cannot tell because the rich person was in a better environment to get a higher grade. For all we know the poor person is the most intelligent and will be better suited to further education.

Sorry if that has already been said.

Most likley the rich person was in a more competetive school in the first place, so that person's grade was harder to earn.

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x_Martyr_x

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#42 x_Martyr_x
Member since 2008 • 839 Posts

It has bothered me for a while, especially involving education. The media uses this word whenever a school or university refuses to accept people below a certain standard. I have no idea how this is meant to do anything. Isn't that the point? To give the moe intelligent a better enviroment to work in and cleverer peers with which to work?

I am actually on of those people that supports the idea that in an election some people's votes should count for more than others.

Shouldn't a person with a degree in economics or in politics or who knows something about how a country is run have more say in the running than say a brick-layer who left school at 16 with no qualifications?

AnObscureName

absolutly not. this idea has bothered me for a while now, do you really think because money bought your education that you are more intelligent than someone? do you really think that? i hate to burst the tiny bubble around your head but most of what they teach you in this "education system" is what they want you to hear, so you can become a better worker for them. you allow yourself to become so sheltered and pretentious that you actually shut your brain off to everything else that wasn't taught to you. ill give you a little advice, intelligence comes from within, not from the knowledge that you had to pay for.

what do we get from these "highly education" types? better liars, thats what.

so thanks but no thanks, ill take the brick layer.

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stupid4

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#43 stupid4
Member since 2008 • 3695 Posts
[QUOTE="AnObscureName"]

It has bothered me for a while, especially involving education. The media uses this word whenever a school or university refuses to accept people below a certain standard. I have no idea how this is meant to do anything. Isn't that the point? To give the moe intelligent a better enviroment to work in and cleverer peers with which to work?

I am actually on of those people that supports the idea that in an election some people's votes should count for more than others.

Shouldn't a person with a degree in economics or in politics or who knows something about how a country is run have more say in the running than say a brick-layer who left school at 16 with no qualifications?

x_Martyr_x

absolutly not. this idea has bothered me for a while now, do you really think because money bought your education that you are more intelligent than someone? do you really think that? i hate to burst the tiny bubble around your head but most of what they teach you in this "education system" is what they want you to hear, so you can become a better worker for them. you allow yourself to become so sheltered and pretentious that you actually shut your brain off to everything else that wasn't taught to you. ill give you a little advice, intelligence comes from within, not from the knowledge that you had to pay for.

what do we get from these "highly education" types? better liars, thats what.

so thanks but no thanks, ill take the brick layer.

People are mislead. Money does not buy you an education. Colleges are looking for diversity now, so money hardly factors. Especially with schools that have huge endowments.

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#44 elpollomaster
Member since 2007 • 189 Posts

[QUOTE="swizz-the-gamer"][QUOTE="AirGuitarist87"] I may be reading that wrong, but you seem to be suggesting that poor people aren't very intelligent.AnObscureName
It's clearly what the thinks, he's raised himself on some intellectual pedestal and is sitting there judging the proles.

Where did you get that impression? I'll admit, maybe I was wrong about voting, but I stand by my view that universities shouldn't have to lower standard's just to accept poorer people.

are you talking about private or public education?

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#46 kittykatz5k
Member since 2004 • 32249 Posts
Everyone's not equal, you're correct. Some people deserve those fancy schools, some people just get bought into them. Being higher up is no shame, but an elitist is the one who spits on the lower downs. You can be high up and not be an elitist. Also, the higher ups don't deserve all the choices in the world. Also, unfounded elitism is a terrible shame to humanity, believeing you deserve so much more when you actually don't.
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Mercenary848

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#47 Mercenary848
Member since 2007 • 12143 Posts
Thinking you are worth more then others isn't right
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Adversary16

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#48 Adversary16
Member since 2007 • 1705 Posts
Elitism isn't about rewarding those who perform better but rather to kick those who are already down (Who, by the way, need help to perform better themselves).
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#49 Mr_sprinkles
Member since 2005 • 6461 Posts
[QUOTE="BeepBoop16"]

[QUOTE="AnObscureName"] No I am suggesting that it is wrong to accept poorer people for the sake of having poorer people in the better universities. stupid4

If a poor person gets a B and a rich person gets an A, who is the most suited for the placement? We cannot tell because the rich person was in a better environment to get a higher grade. For all we know the poor person is the most intelligent and will be better suited to further education.

Sorry if that has already been said.

Most likley the rich person was in a more competetive school in the first place, so that person's grade was harder to earn.

competetive in what sense? money is a much bigger factor than the intellect of the child for even some of the best private schools.

It's more to do with the quality of the teaching. If you get sent to a £4000/year private school, you're gonna have 1 to 1 tutoring, small class sizes, help on demand inside or outside lessons, rigorous coaching for exams/interviews/coursework and those schools can squeeze an A or two out of even the 'moderately able'. Whereas if you attend a crowded, short staffed school in a low income area, you'll get none of those things. getting straight Bs at one of those poorer schools may well require a greater natural ability than attaining straight As at the private school.

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#50 AnObscureName
Member since 2008 • 2069 Posts
[QUOTE="AnObscureName"]

It has bothered me for a while, especially involving education. The media uses this word whenever a school or university refuses to accept people below a certain standard. I have no idea how this is meant to do anything. Isn't that the point? To give the moe intelligent a better enviroment to work in and cleverer peers with which to work?

I am actually on of those people that supports the idea that in an election some people's votes should count for more than others.

Shouldn't a person with a degree in economics or in politics or who knows something about how a country is run have more say in the running than say a brick-layer who left school at 16 with no qualifications?

x_Martyr_x

absolutly not. this idea has bothered me for a while now, do you really think because money bought your education that you are more intelligent than someone? do you really think that? i hate to burst the tiny bubble around your head but most of what they teach you in this "education system" is what they want you to hear, so you can become a better worker for them. you allow yourself to become so sheltered and pretentious that you actually shut your brain off to everything else that wasn't taught to you. ill give you a little advice, intelligence comes from within, not from the knowledge that you had to pay for.

what do we get from these "highly education" types? better liars, thats what.

so thanks but no thanks, ill take the brick layer.

I just want to say that I didn't go to a private school, I went to my local primary and then secondary schools and all university education is free so money isn't the issue and I think I may not have explained myself properly. Also you saying "most of what they teach you is what they want you to hear so you can become a better worker for them" sounds like consiracy theorist rubbish.