Dispatch from Newark Airport
By X.T.M | Acting Editor, Brown Pundits
I lost my train of thought earlier, but Iām back now, writing this from Newark Airport, awaiting a flight back to the United Kingdomāthen onward, as they say, to the old, old world.
What Iād begun to reflect on was social mobilityāand how drastically itās shifted over the past few decades. In much of the Global South, the idea of a working-class avant-gardeāthose who rose through grit, communal aspiration, and sacrificeāstill retains cultural force. But in the Global North, that current has largely dissipated. Class structures have ossified. The ladder still exists, but the rungs are brittle.
Iāve been mapping that reality onto the commentariat, especially the highly educated, striving upper-middle-class Hindus who have, for the most part, embraced the systemāIITs, IIMs, Oxbridge, the Ivies. These are not just institutions; theyāre rites of passage. For many, the peak came at the point of entry. Twenty years on, what remains is not expansion, but a formulaāone track, one ceiling. Continue reading Merit, Class, and the Ossified Dream
