Monday, October 19, 2009

Gangsterism in Schools

I spent some time thinking about this topic recently. A lot of sociologists and psychologists give the standard reason that gangs and tribes are part of normal human behaviour, so it's all a question of how these groups are formed and to what ends they act. But it seems to me that, if schools are indeed agents of socialisation, they should be determining the way gangs behave.

What troubles me more is the equivalent of white-collar gangs. Intellectual gangs. Debater gangs. Children-of-privilege gangs. Scholarship-leads-to-power gangs. This kind of gangsterism is what drives the big crimes, the ones that aren't really crimes and are condoned by society. There are dark imperatives building in that area between black and white, where you can't tell which are the men in either colour.

Get your scholarship. Get an advanced degree. Become a boss. Treat people like crap and eliminate your rivals using everything they taught you at the local civil service training centre, and some things they didn't dare teach you. At any sign that an employee is unhappy, that's disloyalty, for why would he be unhappy with your regime? After all, you have the God-given wisdom to know what's best for him. Best get rid of him then, no need to find out why he is unhappy because that would surely be his lack of wisdom, not yours.

The mafia of the new academic world are not sub-educated grunts, but over-educated villains. And like the stereotypical Bond villain, they have no sense of humour but make you feel like laughing. Of course, if you do, you will suffer drastic consequences.

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1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

So, when the Marginal Social Benefit increases past a certain extent, the Marginal Social Cost is greater than the Marginal Social Benefit and hence we end up harming Society more than we help it.... Never expected to utilize Economics in a situation like this, but hey, you've got to admit it's pretty funny.

Anyway, Over-education, huh? Well, I've heard stories that people who go overseas to study sometimes end up returning back to their own countries with something of a superiority complex, thinking that they are better than everyone else. (Heard this from an old friend of mine, who was warning me of the potential "dangers" of studying overseas and whatnot. i.e., Don't subconsciously develop an arrogant nature and all that.)

/Sorrows

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 4:31:00 am  

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