"There is clearly something wrong with a system that means that more than 30% of places at Oxbridge go to students who attend private schools that cater for just 7% of the population, and that America’s thirty-eight elite colleges have more students from the top 1% of the population than from the bottom 60%."
In this sentence, Adrian Wooldridge is completely wrong.
Societies should grow organically, most education takes place in the family, not at school, and intelligence is to a large degree genetic.
I once sat next to Adrian Wooldridge at lunch at, appropriately, the Reform Club in London and was very impressed by him, but his old-fashioned Liberal politics, appropriate to the club, are very far from mine or, in other words, are very misguided.
A professor of ancient history once said to me that socialism is a terrible system of ideas but the worst thing about socialists is that they are liberals too.
I once sat next to Adrian Wooldridge at lunch at, appropriately, the Reform Club in London and was very impressed by him, but his old-fashioned Liberal politics, appropriate to the club, are very far from mine or, in other words, are very misguided.
A professor of ancient history once said to me that socialism is a terrible system of ideas but the worst thing about socialists is that they are liberals too.
I have come to see that he is right.
Yet even though the real Bagehot, who described himself as a Liberal-Conservative, was often attacked by the High Tory poet CH Sisson in The Spectator in the 1980s, he is or was one of my favourite writers. Perhaps I'd better reread CH Sisson.
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