Out of class

Most Americans are proud of not being class conscious like we think the British are.

David Brooks, ever perceptive, ever irenic, warns about the dangers of (largely) voluntary class segregation, noting that in the United States we tend to stay in our own groups:

  • Last year a group of researchers published a study in the journal Nature in which they surveyed leaders in 30 fields, including law, media, politics and so on. They found that not only had nearly all of society’s power brokers gone to college, 54 percent of them went to the same 34 elite schools. That’s segregation on steroids. . . . In his 2019 book, “The Meritocracy Trap,” Daniel Markovits writes that the academic gap between the affluent and less affluent is greater today than the achievement gap between white Americans and Black Americans in the final days of Jim Crow. I’d like to let that sink in. Nearly all of us were raised on the conviction that Jim Crow was rancid. We’ve effectively recreated it on class lines.

David Brooks, “America’s New Segregation” The New York Times (Aug. 14, 2025) [link].

I think there are at least three places where the “classes” still mix — churches,* ballparks,** and concert venues. If you live and work in one setting, maybe your best bet to get out of your group is to listen to music with a crowd, cheer on your team, or worship God.

Not a bad way to do your civic duty.

*Also synagogues and mosques, but I didn’t want to write the insufferably bland “houses of worship.” **Yeah, yeah, arenas, stadiums, pitches, too.

3 thoughts on “Out of class

  1. A strong caveat is that a government “fix” to this perceived ill is likely to make things worse.

    From personal experience, forced integra

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  2. … tion of public schools only made racial tensions worse. To paraphrase Ronald Reagan, beware of “I’m from the government and I’m here to help. “

    I realize the article didn’t mention government intervention, but it’s the rare politician that doesn’t see a societal problem as an excuse for a new law, agency, &c.

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  3. “Churches.” Seriously? That would be ideal, but with exceptions, the church hour has long been known as “the most segregated hour of the week.” Probably class-wise as well as racially. Shouldn’t be so, but as your post pointed out, people self-segregate, even Christians. A church that has a broad makeup has to happen organically, with the leading of the Holy Spirit. Trying to force it is likely to result in a failed church.

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