I think drill team, sorority, married a frat guy, worked 3 years, go to huge wasp church & brunch every Sunday, had four children and did SAHM. Live a few blocks from both sets of grandparents. |
Same. At work, a partner asked a young intern who had been working in the office for a couple weeks, “who are you?”, and she, who was from the north but spending the summer with extended family, was confused because he knew her name and that she was an intern. So she awkwardly stated the obvious to the partner “I’m Larla.” I laughed and said “he means who’s your daddy? Who are you related to?” Because the assumption is that most people are hired for their relationships, not their resume. |
They do know that that just makes them look like they can’t survive or compete outside of their nepo bubble. Right? I mean, if you can’t hack college outside of the south, getting a national level competitive job, or proving your work yourself, you just fight for more nepotism and BS. I guess all the transplant people and companies still make up it, because there’s no growth selling to your buddies who sell to you. |
I don’t believe this is a real post but I’m from Chicago so here’s my take on the Southern women I run into: drink like a fish, nice to your face but total gossips with their inner circles, gym rats who don’t work, went to college to get married, always wearing bright colors, hates the snow and cold weather except for Colorado. Never met any southerner women in investment banking or my current tech field. I guess that’s saying something. |
This is wrong. It's not an us vs them. DC is snobbish to ANYONE they believe is not as educated or doesn't have credentials. Doesn't matter where they are from. |
I don’t think they care. They take SO much pride in being the great great great great granddaughter of someone most people have never heard of. Seriously, no matter how bad you or your parents screw up, if your granddaddy was considered an important person on their world, or you have the right last name, you are “in”. |
And you assume the OP didn’t go to Vanderbilt? Why? |
We’re not talking about golf and vandie |
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My take is it’s the most restrictive, dull and conforming culture in the whole USA.
The opposite of trying new things or being inquisitive. Heck they never outgrow middle school where everyone somehow feels they have to look, dress and speak the same and do the same handful of things. More like do what your parents or friends do, and that’s that. |
| *subculture |
I think your main question has been asked & answered. As you can tell, no one cares about your religious stuff when other superficial values are so pervasive. |
DP. Y'all have some terrible friends. I've barely met anyone like this living in DC. People are nice, have degrees from all kinds of places, and grew up all over the country/world. I'm a Southerner, and I've never once had any issue with anyone because of it. |
Nepotism is to be revered. DEI initiatives are just efforts to steal spots from the nepo babies and somehow the nepo babies have convinced even the poor whites to be upset about this. |
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Why is this in politics forum
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| I mean the dmv is below the mason dixon line so you are all in the south |