Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a hobby, and let people live. (That would actually make a great bumper sticker…hmmm.)
I'm not losing any sleep over this - it's interesting to me that in an increasingly bifurcated economy with the haves and the have-nots that people who by and large live in good public school districts will slap stickers on their cars advertising their $40K+ per year private schools for (seemingly) no better reason than advertising. I couldn't even imagine doing such a thing.
Do people who do this think about these things and are unbothered by them? or do such concerns not even occur to them?
No. Such concerns don’t occur to me. I just know that I’m better than you and I the bumper sticker to remind you. Go Potomac!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't even imagine. Seems like nothing but a naked flex.
Of go f*ck the right off. Newsflash. Plenty of public school parents put bumper stickers on their
cars too. Get a grip.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a hobby, and let people live. (That would actually make a great bumper sticker…hmmm.)
I'm not losing any sleep over this - it's interesting to me that in an increasingly bifurcated economy with the haves and the have-nots that people who by and large live in good public school districts will slap stickers on their cars advertising their $40K+ per year private schools for (seemingly) no better reason than advertising. I couldn't even imagine doing such a thing.
Do people who do this think about these things and are unbothered by them? or do such concerns not even occur to them?
Anonymous wrote:I can't even imagine. Seems like nothing but a naked flex.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't even imagine. Seems like nothing but a naked flex.
Some people like to brag. Why do you care and how does this affect you?
Anonymous wrote:I can't even imagine. Seems like nothing but a naked flex.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like there are less magnets these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a numerous stickers/ magnets. It started with rec sports and swim team. Then HS and HS sports, now college.
I why people place professional sports, location names (e.g. OBX), or even political magnets on their cars.
FWIW- I have had multiple interactions with strangers due to the car magnets. DC was with some other students when they had a car accident on the way to school. Three parents, one current and two alumni parents stopped to offer assistance. A few months ago, a woman stopped to ask me some questions about the school, she had one on her car also that was given to her by her nephew. Nothing life altering, but it does signal a community. Any right now I am grateful to anything that builds a community.
This is a good point. A few mornings ago I was taking my daughter to school. It was one of the mornings it was raining pretty hard but I noticed a car with our school sticker on the side of the road and it looked like an accident had occurred. We noticed it was a student by themselves so we circled back to make sure everything was okay. They were pretty shaken up and seemed relieved to have another friendly supportive community member during that time. I remember my first accident in high school and it was important to be there. We were late to school that morning and it didn’t matter. The family later called and thanked us for being there in the moment. I can assure you we would not have stopped if we didn’t see the sticker.
So you wouldn’t have stopped if the student didn’t have a sticker? I find that quite disturbing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In England people wear ties that signify what university they went to, please. The ties are also coded so only people who know know.
When I was a child, my dad wouldn’t let me put a school decal on our car, because he thought it looked like bragging. Now I let my kids, because who cares what triggers adult strangers with confidence issues.
Seriously. I really love when the posters show up acting like this is a US-only thing. Sure, maybe people in the UK don't use bumper stickers, but they sure as heck have ways of broadcasting their membership in the elite. You want to see elitism in education, try France! Basically every European country has a separate elite track for education and they have their subtle ways of telling everyone else they're in it.
This. We are just more direct and open about it as a culture (or tacky and ostentatious for those who sneer at the U.S. way). It's like the old money new money or city slicker country bumpkin dynamic. The elitism and exclusivity "I'm better than you" is universal, but just manifests differently. We are a car culture where much public interaction is on the roads, so there's that.
Compared to who? I see lots of brand names and logos outside the US. More than I see in the US. It's ok to wear the shirt, shoes, belts, pants, purses, scarves and hats but gee don't put a label on your car! I would say many more people outside the US are brand conscious even if they are wearing fakes.
Accoutrements like brand clothing, luxury goods, and car magnets are signs of a society with social mobility. People broadcast their status to signal to others who might not know just by looking at them. If everyday life is in a walkable urban society without a car, a car decal does no good. Coded language, posh accents, attire, and other trappings of wealth and superiority are required for those settings. Tomato Tomahto
+1
The Brits are probably the snobbiest culture on the planet.
But wealthy Brits all want to come to the US. MC folks in the US live like UMC folks in the UK. UC folks here are out of reach for most Brits. DH is UMC Brit, just as I come from a UMC American family - our lifestyles were not the same and he feels out of his depth in some of our social circles. It just is.
A sample of one isn’t representative. I’m a Brit and just spent the weekend in Portugal with three UMC Brit friends (one immigrated from the US) and none of them want to live in the US. But I’m not silly enough to assert a sample of four is any more meaningful than your sample of one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a numerous stickers/ magnets. It started with rec sports and swim team. Then HS and HS sports, now college.
I why people place professional sports, location names (e.g. OBX), or even political magnets on their cars.
FWIW- I have had multiple interactions with strangers due to the car magnets. DC was with some other students when they had a car accident on the way to school. Three parents, one current and two alumni parents stopped to offer assistance. A few months ago, a woman stopped to ask me some questions about the school, she had one on her car also that was given to her by her nephew. Nothing life altering, but it does signal a community. Any right now I am grateful to anything that builds a community.
This is a good point. A few mornings ago I was taking my daughter to school. It was one of the mornings it was raining pretty hard but I noticed a car with our school sticker on the side of the road and it looked like an accident had occurred. We noticed it was a student by themselves so we circled back to make sure everything was okay. They were pretty shaken up and seemed relieved to have another friendly supportive community member during that time. I remember my first accident in high school and it was important to be there. We were late to school that morning and it didn’t matter. The family later called and thanked us for being there in the moment. I can assure you we would not have stopped if we didn’t see the sticker.
So you wouldn’t have stopped if the student didn’t have a sticker? I find that quite disturbing.
Agree