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“The society which has abolished every kind of adventure makes its own abolition the only possible adventure.” Paris, May 1968
Tuesday, 27 October 2009
Race and Intelligence
Last nights Channel4 offering, Race and Intelligence... Sciences Last Taboo, was certainly interesting and in it's way a challenging piece but I felt that it stopped short of dealing fully with the issue not just of race and intelligence but of privilege and attainment. Coming as he does from a family of wealthy Somali traders, educated at Cheltenham College and Oxford and having married into the Baronetcy of Corsehill, privilege is something that Rageh Omaar is singularly well equipped to deal with, and he did try, but the programme seemed unable to get seriously to grips with the issue of class. It also failed to address what to my mind is a pretty important issue and that is the reality that given enough privilege it doesn't matter how intelligent you are.
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I did like Warren Buffet's recent comment that the only thing that separated rich people, successful people, "top" people from everyone else was luck. Any other reason was self-justifying bullshit. It's all down to the fates, ain't nothing but Luck.
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