araapatlio
Active Member
- Location
- Scouser living in Thurrock, Essex.
I don't have the time to look up the relevant figures (so please feel free to correct me if I'm wrong!) but the number of people with private educations in the government are over-represented in terms of what would be expected just through chance. This is also true of CEOs in the large publicly listed companies.This comes about as a result of the connections formed and acquaintances met during school - this is acknowledged to be a major advantage of the best private schools over state education.
It is not by chance, of course, but again, correlation is not causation. If you are from a rich family with connections you are more likely to go to private school, it is not the school so much as the background. Ed Miliband went to a "state school" (strictly true, but to hear him tell it you'd think it was a bog standard comp) but he got to his position in the Labour party due to his parents connections and the fact of the environment in which he was raised led him to that career.
It seems a little ironic to be support the idea of private education as a freedom when it is in fact one of the mechanisms used to ensure the elite remain in the positions of power they're accustomed to.
I object to positions of power, not to the class of people holding them. I don't care if Cameron's dad was a bin man or a billionaire, he should not have power over my life.