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Notes -
I thought the argument that I had generally seen (not sure if it's true) is that the ranks of revolutionaries, especially in late 19th century Russia, were often occupied by the children of the middle class and upper middle class bourgeoisie (especially lawyers, doctors, and bankers) who had been bred for success but weren't seeing it, or had a sense of their opportunities drying up. Even now, the most actually radically inclined people I know, generally, are grad students who have no actual career prospects in universities - their education and self-regard is highly unbalanced with their actual economic prospects.
I was thinking more of their parents - the actual middle and upper middle class that had launched successfully, had valuable credentials and professional experience, owned meaningful property... basically the layer of society that has skin in the game to lose if significant disruption happened. I'm almost positive Aristotle talks about this, so the idea isn't new.
Only 14 percent of Zoomer college grads actually have a job that requires a college diploma.
The WSJ gives a number of 52% for "jobs that don’t make use of their skills or credentials"
https://archive.is/ZZ6le
This includes some younger Millennials as well.
Either way, that’s more than enough to drive radicalization.
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