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by rhizome
4684 days ago
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lose a lot of respect from peers if you are rising fast and they find out a powerful person has soft spot for him/her. The only place this kind of favoritism is a negative is with personal relationships. Nobody bats an eye when the riser is a fraternity or alma mater cohort, where that kind of thing is expected. If I were a betting man, I'd say it's a class argument that the favoritism wasn't "earned" in the proper way, without the old school tie. Aside from that, in contemporary business culture, losing respect of your peers is no loss when you're upwardly mobile. They're the ones you're leaving behind. |
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I suspect that you're projecting here. I think favoritism in any of those situations is both expected and resented.
I don't see how sexual relationships are any less class-based than alma mater or frat stuff. People are more likely to have been in the same frat with someone outside of their class than to have dated someone outside of their class.