Thursday, December 2, 2010
Monopoly
In class we played Monopoly, but there different rules! These rules were made to better simulate the class structure of America. It did a good job with the wealthy not only starting out with more money, but already having property. The had next to nothing and had really no chance of moving up. Though the game couldn't show the entire process of moving through the class system, it did a good job to show the difficulty. I mean life isn't just buying property and hoping people show up to pay you, but that would be one complicated simulation. I think this sort of simulation can be an eye opener to how different the wealthy are from the poor and all that is in between. It also shows the possibility of the middle class moving up in the middle class rankings. A person can move from middle-middle to upper-middle in a lifetime. This somewhat possible unlike lower to lower-middle or upper-middle to just upper. Wow that was a lot of hyphens. I do think through generations of hard work and smart decisions can allow people and families to move up in the ranks of society. This may be to long for some, but I think the longer something takes to do, the more worth while it actually is.
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I just did a blog on how through generations social status can change, but it's insanely difficult. Great post!
ReplyDeleteYeah I see what your saying in the game you can move up if you play for a really long time but, in real life someone who is living paycheck to paycheck and spends their entire paycheck on their bills and rent doesn't really have a chance to move up in class. On another note SO MANY HYPHENS!
ReplyDeleteGreat point about moving up across generations. I didn't have time to mention in class, but sociologists call this kind of social mobility intergenerational mobility and it is more common than intragenerational mobility which is changing social classes within one's own life. Intergenerational would be like starting a new monopoly game but your kids got to play with whatever you earned.
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