Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

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7 years, 10 months ago

inequality and social mobility archive/so478

It maybe should not be a surprise that there is a symbiotic relationship between high inequality in a society and low social mobility. In a highly unequal society, many advantaged parents will do all they can to ensure that their children do not slip down the economic ladder--they know that it goes…

—p.215 Good Times, Bad Times: The Welfare Myth of Them and Us The longest wave (181) by John Hills
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7 years, 10 months ago

meritocracy as satire, not blueprint

What is often forgotten is that Michael Young's 1958 book, The rise of the meritocracy, which introduced the word, was a satire, not a blue print. Its point was the smugness of those who rose to the top of such a society and believed not only that they deserved whatever rewards flowed from that, …

—p.214 The longest wave (181) by John Hills
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7 years, 10 months ago

lots of things that money can buy

[...] there are lots of things that money can buy, such as:

  • high-quality pre-school care
  • houses in the catchment areas of the best-regarded state schools (which then command a significant premium)
  • after-school activities, private tutors, etc
  • private schooling
  • parental support in …
—p.202 The longest wave (181) by John Hills
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7 years, 10 months ago

on equality of opportunity

Nearly all political parties across the spectrum aspire to the idea that there should be 'equality of opportunity'. What people mean by equality of opportunity varies, however, sometimes concentrating on relative chances of ending up at the top or bottom of a social or economic ladder, sometimes on…

—p.183 The longest wave (181) by John Hills
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7 years, 10 months ago

the wrong relatives archive/so478

[...] The issue is not just between a lucky generation of baby-boomers now approaching retirement who got the best pension deals and benefited most from the house price boom, and a younger 'jilted generation' who have little. Many baby boomers have little wealth, and only a minority enough to see t…

—p.178 The long wave (145) by John Hills