[Deleted User] wrote: » I've been seeing this term coming up a lot lately from the SF, or housing related threads, and I'm a bit confused as to who in Ireland would be considered working class? Is it a matter of being born into a working class family, and thus you're working class forever, regardless of your income and educational qualifications? Or does having a degree and a professional job move you into middle class? Is working class a standard of living where your salary is lower than the average? Or the type of work, like working in a supermarket, or a cafe? Like, I'm from what's considered a middle class family, my parents both being teachers, but my income is nowhere close to what they achieved while they were working. I do own a house, but the mortgage guarantees that my lifestyle is rather minimal (should I live in my house and stay in Ireland). I wouldn't consider myself to be working class, as such, but I do work, and I'm nowhere close to being secure/comfortable financially speaking. So... What is working class to you, and could you define the limits? Not just a one liner, but actually spell out whether it's permanent, dependent on income, education, etc. How does someone move from working class into Middle class, and also move from middle class into working class? Cheers.
Rufeo wrote: » Basically it's Irish people importing some foreign culture and using that to describe Irish life. There's no class system in Ireland. There's just rich people and poor people.
Trigger Happy wrote: » Or..ireland could be split in to tax dodgers, tax payers and tax spenders...
blindside88 wrote: » A lot of people in Ireland refer to themselves as “working class” despite the fact that they along with their parents are on social welfare and have no intention of working. Both myself and my wife are in well paying jobs and have our own home but I would consider us to be working class as we are about a months pay from having nothing
imme wrote: » It is a redundant term. Paddy O'Gorman from RTE radio was interviewing people outside the Social Welfare office before Christmas 2019. One woman was saying how her children all wanted x,y,z items. She said how she would be spending €1,000 on each child. Oh, to be working class, fancy phones and Canada Goose coats.
Steyr 556 wrote: » If you work for a living you are working class. Not at all to be confused with the underclass who do not work for a living.
Jimbob1977 wrote: » An interesting fact.... 5% of Irish adults are described as 'disabled' on the last census. In some areas of Limerick, 15% of people have declared themselves as disabled and incapable of work. Unless they have localised TB or rickets, this is a wind-up.
anewme wrote: » The classes have changed since the working class dont work anymore. Everyone who's not rich sits in the middle and keeps the place afloat.
doughef wrote: » Also - I’m not really sure you change being working class unless you aspire to . Case in point .. Liam and Noel Gallagher / both multi millionaires but always proud to be working class
mikemac2 wrote: » I heard that one too The kids needed an iPhone XR which was a little discounted as an old model but is still €600 plus What child needs such a phone? Well it was justified that you couldn’t allow the child to fall behind their friends
ILoveYourVibes wrote: » You don't think the majority of irish people under 40 these days are working pay check to pay check with very little free capital and no future inheritance etc?? WHERE DO YOU LIVE? Also there are a lot of working class people ...who think they are middle class ...economically they are not.
Rodin wrote: » There's not much to do in an emergency hotel room. Warm room. Free heat and electric. Iphone in hand. Poverty and homeless apparently.
Natasha Harsh Royalty wrote: » That people such as the Gallaghers can identify as "working class," despite being relatively wealthy, shows that class identification these days can be as much a style or a state of mind as a tangible economic condition. Working-class people might eat fish and chips, drink lager, watch football and darts, and read the Sun, while scorning middle-class people who eat falafel, drink wine, watch tennis and golf, and read the Guardian. It's often about the signifiers you adopt rather than what job you do or how much money you earn.