I guess that virtually all posters here are at least middle class, for many reasons (not least of which that it shows they have a lot of free time, so as to bother posting at a net forum) so i am not sure how good a question it is for this crowd.
Myself i am middle class too, but yesterday i had a rather long discussion with a person who used to be working class, for most of his life. He appears to be filled with rage against the perceived enemies of the working people. We talked a bit about the current economic crisis, and he confessed that if a sort of revolution happens, he will use his "poison" (from the rage against the old opressor) to hunt down those who control the wealth to the detriment of the working classes.
I have to say i was rather alarmed by all this. Personally i never had to work for a living, and obviously this made me more relaxed when it comes to the issue of money. But i never expected there to exist such rage, and wondered if it was characteristic in the blue collar professions.
He spoke of the horror of being a worker in such jobs, working for 8, or 10 hours a day, and feeling like an animal. I felt like i was the object he was hating, although it appears he has no negative emotions against me.
So, in your experience, is class war as real as this person appeared to sense it was? Or was it just a special case? He now has a white collar job, but still is filled, as he said, with his old poison from being treated like an animal from his employers of old.
I seldom think of money and classes. I am too introverted for all that. But i did not feel nice learning of such hatred...
Myself i am middle class too, but yesterday i had a rather long discussion with a person who used to be working class, for most of his life. He appears to be filled with rage against the perceived enemies of the working people. We talked a bit about the current economic crisis, and he confessed that if a sort of revolution happens, he will use his "poison" (from the rage against the old opressor) to hunt down those who control the wealth to the detriment of the working classes.
I have to say i was rather alarmed by all this. Personally i never had to work for a living, and obviously this made me more relaxed when it comes to the issue of money. But i never expected there to exist such rage, and wondered if it was characteristic in the blue collar professions.
He spoke of the horror of being a worker in such jobs, working for 8, or 10 hours a day, and feeling like an animal. I felt like i was the object he was hating, although it appears he has no negative emotions against me.
So, in your experience, is class war as real as this person appeared to sense it was? Or was it just a special case? He now has a white collar job, but still is filled, as he said, with his old poison from being treated like an animal from his employers of old.
I seldom think of money and classes. I am too introverted for all that. But i did not feel nice learning of such hatred...