While it can be malicious I do wonder if in some cases its outright ignorance (albeit caused by a total lack of any real empathy), If you get everything handed to you then you percieve yourself as having ‘earned’ it with almost zero effort therefore life must be easy right? And if you’re doing so great with how little effort you had to put in then anyone doing worse than you must just be incredibly lazy right?
Having interacted with a lot more privileged people since I immigrated to central europe, a lot of it is ego protection. These people tend to live in a bubble, where they’re surrounded with people like them. Having to interact with less privileged people tends to put their life and opportunities in stark contrast and to prevent their psyche from cognitive dissonance, they have to embrace such ideas in order to soothe themselves that they deserve where they are.
Guess my ego is strong enough to know that my readiness in college and finding jobs was highly dependent on the support my family gave me…
How is it not luck that my parents cared about my academic success from early in life? That I didn’t need to have a side job during college? Or the more subtle knowing that, whatever happened, I was always welcome back home, so I could take more risky career moves without fearing to end up in the streets?
Sure, I “worked hard”, aka studied in college, applied for a bunch of jobs, applied myself in those jobs and had the luck (again!) that my effort was rewarded. I know rich kids that took too much for granted and didn’t get very far. But they still have a roof over their head and as many warm meals as they feel like.
And it’s not even that they have everything handed to them in a literal sense (e.g. “here’s a credit card with no limit”) but that they are handed opportunities others would not get (e.g. “let me introduce you to my friend who’s high up in x company/industry that could land you a job”) and assume that it’s due to their skill and not zip code and social circle.
There is still something to be said for malice, and general unrelated entitlement though.
While it can be malicious I do wonder if in some cases its outright ignorance (albeit caused by a total lack of any real empathy), If you get everything handed to you then you percieve yourself as having ‘earned’ it with almost zero effort therefore life must be easy right? And if you’re doing so great with how little effort you had to put in then anyone doing worse than you must just be incredibly lazy right?
Having interacted with a lot more privileged people since I immigrated to central europe, a lot of it is ego protection. These people tend to live in a bubble, where they’re surrounded with people like them. Having to interact with less privileged people tends to put their life and opportunities in stark contrast and to prevent their psyche from cognitive dissonance, they have to embrace such ideas in order to soothe themselves that they deserve where they are.
Guess my ego is strong enough to know that my readiness in college and finding jobs was highly dependent on the support my family gave me…
How is it not luck that my parents cared about my academic success from early in life? That I didn’t need to have a side job during college? Or the more subtle knowing that, whatever happened, I was always welcome back home, so I could take more risky career moves without fearing to end up in the streets?
Sure, I “worked hard”, aka studied in college, applied for a bunch of jobs, applied myself in those jobs and had the luck (again!) that my effort was rewarded. I know rich kids that took too much for granted and didn’t get very far. But they still have a roof over their head and as many warm meals as they feel like.
Oh no, it’s actually almost always ignorance.
And it’s not even that they have everything handed to them in a literal sense (e.g. “here’s a credit card with no limit”) but that they are handed opportunities others would not get (e.g. “let me introduce you to my friend who’s high up in x company/industry that could land you a job”) and assume that it’s due to their skill and not zip code and social circle.
There is still something to be said for malice, and general unrelated entitlement though.
“It’s not what you know, it’s who you know, that will get you ahead in life.”
– someone
It’s always survivorship bias. They survived, and they think the things they did was the reason they survived.
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The ignorance and maliciousness are in a feedback loop; one required for the wealthy to have self esteem.