Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The answer is “yes,” but 99 percent of posters want it to be “no.”
You’ve got it reversed. The college obsessed parents here want assurances that their kids will remain at the top of the pecking order in a country that is shifting in many ways toward greater equality. Thus, they need to believe that a stamp from a top school will be the magic item to assure that. It is weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The answer is “yes,” but 99 percent of posters want it to be “no.”
You’ve got it reversed. The college obsessed parents here want assurances that their kids will remain at the top of the pecking order in a country that is shifting in many ways toward greater equality. Thus, they need to believe that a stamp from a top school will be the magic item to assure that. It is weird.
You mean "dumb down"?
Equating equality with a dumbing down is racist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The answer is “yes,” but 99 percent of posters want it to be “no.”
You’ve got it reversed. The college obsessed parents here want assurances that their kids will remain at the top of the pecking order in a country that is shifting in many ways toward greater equality. Thus, they need to believe that a stamp from a top school will be the magic item to assure that. It is weird.
You mean "dumb down"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. It's a strong signal, at the very least.
And I know plenty of people who use it, secretly and not so secretly, as a shibboleth and for setting parameters for dating/potential marriage partners.
Look no further than the DC area assortative nerd mating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The answer is “yes,” but 99 percent of posters want it to be “no.”
You’ve got it reversed. The college obsessed parents here want assurances that their kids will remain at the top of the pecking order in a country that is shifting in many ways toward greater equality. Thus, they need to believe that a stamp from a top school will be the magic item to assure that. It is weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The answer is “yes,” but 99 percent of posters want it to be “no.”
You’ve got it reversed. The college obsessed parents here want assurances that their kids will remain at the top of the pecking order in a country that is shifting in many ways toward greater equality. Thus, they need to believe that a stamp from a top school will be the magic item to assure that. It is weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. It's a strong signal, at the very least.
And I know plenty of people who use it, secretly and not so secretly, as a shibboleth and for setting parameters for dating/potential marriage partners.
Look no further than the DC area assortative nerd mating.
Most of the people graduating from T20s aren't nerds in the pop cultural sense.
Anonymous wrote:The answer is “yes,” but 99 percent of posters want it to be “no.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. It's a strong signal, at the very least.
And I know plenty of people who use it, secretly and not so secretly, as a shibboleth and for setting parameters for dating/potential marriage partners.
Look no further than the DC area assortative nerd mating.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. It's a strong signal, at the very least.
And I know plenty of people who use it, secretly and not so secretly, as a shibboleth and for setting parameters for dating/potential marriage partners.
Anonymous wrote:The answer is “yes,” but 99 percent of posters want it to be “no.”