by Robert Bridge February 13, 2024 from RT Website
A recent report shows just how deep the split between wealthy university graduates
and the rest
is...
At a time when there is anxious talk of people
being forced to
eat bugs, embrace illegal
immigrants, inhabit
15-minute cities and
own absolutely nothing - all
the while 'being happy,' or else! - there is no better time to
examine the mindset of the people who throw their hefty weight
behind such bold initiatives, namely,
the elite.
Members of this pampered tribe of overachievers
are also likely to have graduated from one of America's 12
prestigious Ivy League universities, which include Harvard, Cornell,
Yale and Princeton, and are increasingly becoming bastions of woke
ideology.
If you've already guessed that these folks are primarily liberal and Democratic in their political outlook, you are not mistaken.
It is these people who "live in a bubble of their own construction"; they determine public policy from the college campus, in the legacy media, and corporate board rooms without the participation of the average taxpaying American citizen.
To better understand their power, suffice it to
recall the massive full-court press that they put on display during
the 'fiery but mostly peaceful protests' over George Floyd.
In other words, without so much as a drop of spilt blood, the American people have come to inherit two distinct nations:
The "deplorables," as
Hillary Clinton once infamously
called the other side of the political aisle, namely those
God-fearing, gun toting folks who inhabit the 'flyover states.'
It is this type of entrenched thinking that goes far at explaining the radical takeover of the public school system, for example, by progressives pushing all sorts of experiments on children, involving everything from White-hating critical race theory to transgender ideology.
When parents attempt to fight back against this
particular form of brainwashing, they are put on FBI watch lists.
In stark contrast to the rest of America, two-thirds of the elite (67%) are of the opinion that teachers and other educational professionals should be allowed to decide what schoolchildren are taught as opposed to letting parents make the decision.
While that may have been a plausible notion just
10 years ago, America is a radically changed place to the point
where teachers, many conservatives believe, can no longer be trusted
with their kids.
It's hard to fathom that any American, living in
a country founded on the powerful belief in individualism and
private initiative, would ever foster the notion that freedom is
something to be feared.
Such draconian measures, however, will never affect the rich, whose close proximity to the establishment will always protect them from the very agendas they embrace.
That is why 60 percent of the elite hold a
positive view of lawyers, lobbyists, politicians, and journalists;
they understand what it takes to maintain their grip on power and
privilege.
Yet their ability to turn the tide is severely limited, which goes far in explaining the huge popularity of the populist Donald Trump, the omnipotent Orange Man who promises to go to war against the 'deep state' on their behalf.
By comparison, President
Joe Biden enjoys an 84% job
approval rating among the elite - which is about twice as high as
the public at large.
During the post-'pandemic' period of economic
hardship, when many Americans have been forced to get a second or
third job just to make ends meets, 74% of elites say they are
financially better off today than in the past versus 20% of all
Americans.
Increasingly, with the chasm separating the elite
and everyone else widening every day, those seem to be the only two
likely futures awaiting the country.
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