This time it was about royality, you know, I am not royality but it was the first reverse classist comment I came around since I made that choice to educate people again (first time I made that choice it ended very wrong and people started making fun if me).
See, I understand why for you this is no big deal... and you think maybe royality is a bit funny anyway and why not use them for a joke. See I cannot say how royality is seeing this cause I am not royality.
But in my class we are often at the butt of jokes and I know how it makes me feel. I wanna cry my eyes out.
Cultural context is so interesting.
Americans have variations on this colloquial expression - "acting like Royalty". Colloquially, to say that someone is acting like they're a king or queen is considered equivalent to saying they were acting like others were beneath them. It has a context as an American expression, considering we made a big deal out of setting up something different than a monarchy.
I think the concept of royalty has different contexts, largely depending on how one/a society has related to it. I'm happy to learn about the way other societies relate to it - but I also don't expect to stop relating to the concept the way it applies inside of the society/nation I live in.
When you say 'educate people' - I think, you can always share your viewpoint. Provide information. But in an international conversation, I'm not sure how it would ever be more than that - an exchange of viewpoints.
And apparently, there are rules about how members of the British royal family can/should comport and conduct themselves. I think all upper classes have 'rules', written or un-written...some noise was made about the colors of nail polish that it was OK for Megan Markle (nee Duchess of Sussex) to wear, according the Queen's preferences. I do kind of think that's nutty...I don't think it's classist for me to say so. The Queen of England is a public figure - people are always going to applaud or critique what she and her family do...then again, my view on that is super-duper america-f*ck-yeah-freedom-of-speech and all that.
Oh, I dunno, I can't make sense of what I'm trying to say...I'm simultaneously sorry,
@Never_falter, for you being of a class that is often the butt of jokes, and feeling vey badly about it; I'm sorry for that, it must suck. I'm sorry, and also frustrated, because I think there are cultural contexts in play, here, and I think you're making some false equivalencies.
Random side note: it is against the law (since the 17th century?) for the royal family to involve themselves in politics - something I was unaware of until this little tidbit about the recent referendum in Ireland
[FG Senator Catherine Noone]has deleted a tweet that said the Duchess of Sussex, Meghan Markle, was pleased by the result of Ireland’s abortion referendum...As a member of the royal family, [she] is prohibited from speaking publicly about politics.
FG Senator deletes tweet claiming Meghan Markle approved of abortion vote
I can imagine it being a lot for Megan M. (coming from America) to have to absorb these kinds of rules, this level of scrutiny.
apart from that I am worried because in the last weeks two persons on this board felt attacked by me when this was not my intent...
When you set out to teach people that their opinions are wrong, they will not respond positively.
Especially when you've misconstrued their meaning. It's actually better to think in terms of expressing your own, letting others express theirs, and agreeing to disagree.
But even if I had none of this stress in my life I would still think that reverse classism is bad.
Asking this not to stress you out....but I'm curious why you call it reverse classism - it's just classism, isn't it? Especially if you are interested in changing it. Calling it 'reverse' implies that you are trying to preserve the class hierarchy, which I'd think, doesn't help the class issue, generally.