Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Frankly, only strivers on the outside looking in think or pretend tier twos are on the cusp of elite. The truly elite have history, traditions, patina, they offer status, a tightknit network, they have a distinct vibe and ethos that can not be replicated at the inferior wannabes, and their alums aren't ever confused for nitwit state school grads. When parents hear your child is at an Ivy, Stanford or MIT they're intrigued, they wanna know how you did it, who they're dating, what they're studying, who they're rubbing elbows with. Nobody freakin' cares about your kid tailgating in Nashville or dodging snowstorms in a purple hoodie in boring suburban Cook County or dodging armed robberies in dreary south side Chicago or dusting off Newt Gingrich's dissertation in Atlanta. The tier twos are full of smart kids, sure, but smart workerbees are a dime a dozen. Truly impressive difference makers go to truly impressive schools – they and their families won't settle for anything less. Maybe they don't get into Harvard but they do get into Penn or MIT or Brown, of course. The more you desperate strivers keep this up the more pathetic and insecure you look. Look, your child got into a good school – be proud, but please cease this whole pretending you know anything about the Ivy League charade. You don't know what you don't know, you do not comprehend what your child is missing out on. And the reality is no hiring committee has ever said "we must hire that Emory/UChicago/Rice/Northwestern/Vandy candidate!" It's actually laughable to think those schools pop off any CV. Most people haven't even heard of the tier twos, and if they have, they don't really care about them. Just the honest truth.
Patrick Bateman is real, people.