You have two options for this question. Answer whichever you're more comfortable with.
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Have you ever lived for at least a year in an American neighborhood in which the majority of your 50 nearest neighbors did not have college degrees?
Make your judgment with regard to your neighborhood, not your ZIP code. Answer “no” if you are thinking of a gentrifying neighborhood in which you were one of the gentrifiers.
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How many years have you lived in such a place?
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Did you grow up in a family in which the chief breadwinner was not in a managerial position or a high-prestige profession (defined as attorney, physician, dentist, architect, engineer, scientist or college professor)?
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Was the chief breadwinner for most or all of your childhood in what you consider to be a blue-collar job?
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Have you ever lived for at least a year in an American community with a population under 50,000 that is not part of a metropolitan area and is not where you went to college?
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How small was the community?
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Have you ever lived for at least a year in the United States at a family income that was close to or below the poverty line?
You may answer "yes" if your family income then was below $33,000 in 2015 dollars. Graduate school doesn't count. Living unemployed with your family after college doesn't count.
Take your best guess. For estimating your family’s past income, you should multiply what you or your parents used to make by the appropriate inflator. For example, if your dad made $7,000 a year when you were growing up in 1970, you should multiply that by 6.2. He made about $43,300 in 2015 dollars. You may estimate the inflator for any particular year from these: 1940, 17.2; 1950, 9.9; 1960, 8.1; 1970, 6.2; 1980, 2.9; 1990, 1.8; 2000, 1.5.
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Have you experienced poverty both as a child and as an adult?
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Have you ever walked on a factory floor?
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Was it related to your job?
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Have you ever held a job that caused something to hurt at the end of the day?
The question applies to any part of the body that hurts because of physical labor using the large muscles. Headaches don't count, neither does carpal tunnel syndrome, nor does a sore rear end from sitting all day in front of a computer screen. Sore feet from having to stand up for long periods of time, however, do count.
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Did the job last longer than a summer?
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Did the job make you ache all over?
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Have you ever had a close friend who was an evangelical Christian?
The distinguishing characteristics of evangelical Christians are belief in the historical accuracy of both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament, including especially the divinity and resurrection of Christ, and belief in the necessity of personal conversion — being "born again" — as a condition for salvation.
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Are you an evangelical Christian yourself?
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Do you now have a close friend with whom you have strong and wide-ranging political disagreements?
Answer "no" if they are disagreements within the same side of the political spectrum (for example, you are a liberal who has an ultraliberal friend or a conservative with an ultraconservative friend).
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Do you have more than one such close friend?
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Have you ever had a close friend who could seldom get better than Cs in high school even if he or she tried hard?
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During the last month have you voluntarily hung out with people who were smoking cigarettes?
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Do you know what military ranks are denoted by these five insignia? (Click each one to show the correct rank.)
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Colonel (or navy captain)
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Major general (or navy rear admiral, upper half)
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Corporal
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Master sergeant
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Captain (or navy lieutenant)
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Do you know who Jimmie Johnson is?
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Which of these is he?
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Have you ever purchased Avon products?
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Have you or your spouse ever bought a pickup truck?
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During the last year, have you ever purchased domestic mass-market beer to stock your own fridge?
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During the last five years, have you or your spouse gone fishing?
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Do you or your spouse go fishing more than once a year?
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How many times in the last year have you eaten at one of the following restaurant chains?
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In high school, did you letter in anything?
Answer "yes" if you got any high school varsity letter (that wasn’t for the debating team or chess club) or if you were a cheerleader or in the marching band.
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Have you ever attended a meeting of a Kiwanis Club, Rotary Club or union local?
Note that it is not enough just to have belonged to a union. You have to have actually attended a meeting in order to answer “yes.”
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Have you ever participated in a parade not involving global warming, a war protest or gay rights?
Helping to decorate a float counts even if you didn't get to ride on it.
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Since leaving school, have you ever worn a uniform?
Wearing a uniform in a dramatic production or on Halloween does not count.
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Did you do so as part of your job?
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Have you ever done either of these for a trip of 50 miles or more?
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Which of the following movies have you seen (at a theater or on a DVD)?
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During the 2014–15 television season, how many of the following series did you watch regularly?
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Have you ever watched an episode of any of these shows all the way through?
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What does the word "Branson" mean to you?
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Have you gone to Branson yourself?
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In the 2000 census, 92 percent of Americans lived in ZIP codes in which the majority of adults ages 25 and older did not have college degrees. Seventy-seven percent lived in ZIP codes where less than a third of adults 25 and older adults had degrees.
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The percentage of households in which the chief breadwinner was not in a managerial position or a high-prestige profession ranged from 85 percent in 1960 to 75 percent in 2010.
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The percentage of Americans fitting the description in the question was 58 percent in the 1960 census and 48 percent in the 2000 census. You may find it surprising, as I did, that 21 percent of Americans still lived in rural areas as of the 2000 census and another 10 percent lived in towns of fewer than 10,000 people — in total, almost a third of the population. That figure is not completely cleansed of bedroom communities, but it's close.
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A majority of Americans in their 40s have been below the poverty line for a year at least once since their teens — 56 percent for the 1979 cohort of the NLSY.
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I was prompted to use this question because of a personal experience.
In the mid-1980s, my sponsor for a speech at a local college in Wichita was the owner of a factory that made cardboard boxes, and my host took me to see it. It was fascinating — the ingenious machines, the noise, the speed, the organization.
Then it struck me that every product I used was made in such a place — in the aggregate, thousands of them, constituting the world that made my life possible — and until then I had never seen even a glimpse of it except as a small child on a single visit to Maytag Company's assembly line.
My visit to the box factory was a quarter of a century ago, and I haven't been on another factory floor since.
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If you answered "no" to this one, your bubble is thick indeed. John Kenneth Galbraith, who grew up on a farm, once said that after you've worked on a farm, nothing else you ever do is work. One might also say that if you've never had a job where something hurts at the end of the day, you don't know what work is. You certainly don't know what work is like for the large proportion of the American population who do hold jobs that cause something to hurt at the end of the day.
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In the Pew Forum survey of the U.S. religious landscape in 2004, with a sample of more than 35,000, 26.3 percent of the respondents said they were affiliated with evangelical Protestant churches, the single largest category. Catholics came in second at 23.9 percent, mainline Protestant churches third at 18.1 percent and "unaffiliated" fourth at 16.1 percent.
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The reason for this question is obvious from the discussion of red and blue SuperZips in chapter 3 of “Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960-2010.” See Bill Bishop's "The Big Sort" for a comprehensive analysis of this issue.
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I use this question as a way of getting at the question I would like to ask, "Have you ever had a close friend who would have scored below the national average on an IQ test?" I can't ask that question, because readers who grew up in an upper middle class neighborhood or went to school with the children of the upper middle class have no way of knowing what average means. The empirical case for that statement is given in detail elsewhere, but it may be summarized quickly.
The typical mean IQ for students in schools that the children of the upper-middle class attend is around 115, compared to the national mean of 100. In such a school, almost all of the below-average students, the ones you thought of as the school's dummies, actually were above the national average. Even if the students were arranged in a normal distribution around a mean of 115, only 11 percent of the students could be expected to have IQs under 100.
But they probably weren't normally distributed, especially at a private school that uses a floor of academic ability in its admission decisions. So if you went to an upper-middle- class school and think you had a good friend who was below the national mean IQ, he or she would have been one of the students who was at the absolute bottom of academic ability.
If you answered "yes" to this question as stated, you need to ask yourself if you fudged about the definition of "close friend." We hate to think we're such snobs that we have consorted only with people as smart as we are, and the temptation is strong to define a classmate in high school who didn’t seem very smart, but with whom we exchanged friendly greetings in the lunchroom as a “close friend.”
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In the Center for Disease Control’s 2009 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, 35 percent of the respondents said that they smoked some days or every day.
Rates of smoking have a strong socioeconomic gradient, but the wording of the question is designed to get at something else. Open smoking in the world of the new upper class has become so rare that it is nearly invisible. Cigars and pipes appear occasionally, but it is possible to go for weeks in the new upper class milieu without smelling a whiff of cigarette smoke anywhere except on a public street. Elsewhere in America, there are still lots of homes, bars and work sites where smoking goes on openly, and nonsmokers in those settings accept it as a fact of life. The question asks to what extent you have any voluntary participation in that part of America.
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In 2007, 1.4 million Americans were on active duty in the armed forces, another 1.3 million were in the reserve and 805,000 civilians worked directly for the Department of Defense. People who live in counties where a large military base is located account for another 8.4 million.
In the 2000 census, 26.4 million Americans were veterans of the armed forces. In mainstream America, just about every neighborhood is peppered with numerous veterans, and the local chapter of the VFW or American Legion is still a significant civic force in much of America.
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For tens of millions of Americans, Jimmie Johnson is the most important figure in sports. He was the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion for five consecutive years from 2006 to 2010, a feat as unlikely as pulling off the Grand Slam in golf or tennis. NASCAR itself rivals the NFL, NBA and Major League Baseball by several measures of attendance, economic clout, and size of fan base.
Score 1 point (consolation prize) if you identified him as the former coach of the Dallas Cowboys (the coach spells it Jimmy, not Jimmie).
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Avon is one of the largest companies selling cosmetics and perfume door-to-door, with sales of $9.9 billion in 2007.
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In 2010, Americans bought about 1.6 million new pickup trucks.
Occasionally members of the new upper class buy one for fun or because they need one at their summer place in Montana. But it remains true that people who have a need for the things that a pickup truck can do are usually engaged in activities that people in the new upper class often don't do at all — or things that the new upper class hires other people to do for them.
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The leading qualifying beers are Budweiser, Coors, Miller or Busch (light or regular). The disdain of the new upper class for domestic mass-market beer is nearly as intense as its disdain for people who smoke cigarettes.
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Fishing is a regular pastime for about 40 million Americans, and at the center of the annual vacation for millions more who don't fish regularly.
It is so popular that it supports not just one but two professional bass fishing tournament circuits, the Bassmaster Tournament Trail and the Walmart FLW Tour, plus several regional tours. Top prize for the Bassmaster Classic is $500,000. Win the Forrest Wood Cup, and you get $1 million. Both major tours are nationally televised.
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However much they disapprove of fast food in theory and restrict their visits, almost all members of the new upper class at least know what the inside of a McDonald's looks like. But how about the chains of sit-down restaurants that form such an integral part of life in most of America? The nine I listed are the ones with the most outlets in the United States.
I could not get statistics on meals served by them, but given that these nine chains had revenues of more than $12 billion in 2009 (probably much more), and all of that comes from dinner checks that ran around $5 to $25 per person, the aggregate number of meals served by just the top nine chains has to be in the high hundreds of millions — at least.
Why a list of nine chains instead of the more natural top 10? Because one of the top 10 is Chipotle Mexican Grill, which is to the casual-dining genre of restaurants what Whole Foods is to grocery stores.
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The stereotype of the overeducated elitest snob as a teenager is someone who either went to a private school where team sports were not a big deal or went to a public school where he held himself aloof from the team sports and collateral activities that are such an important part of the culture of public high schools. Does the stereotype fit you?
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Both the Kiwanis Club and Rotary Club have for several decades been a primary networking organization for local businessmen. They are more influential in small cities than in large ones, but their reach extends everywhere. They are a significant source of secular social capital as well, playing an active role in a variety of civic activities. Unions usually do not play a large role in generating social capital for the community at large, but they are often centrally important to the work life of members of the union.
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Celebratory parades, as opposed to parades on behalf of causes, occur everywhere in America, from small towns to ethnic neighborhoods in the largest cities, but not so often in the enclaves of the new upper class. This question asks if you have ever been part of one.
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A uniform can consist of as little as a shirt with your employer's logo that you are required to wear on the job. It gives you a chance to score a point or two if you are a member of a social club that occasionally has rituals involving uniforms, if you are a Civil War reenactor or if you participate in an adult athletic league.
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About 25 million people rode on a Greyhound Bus in 2008 alone. There are no statistics on hitchhiking.
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These represent the 10 top-grossing films of 2015 that were not principally directed at children or teens.
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These were the 10 television series (omitting five sports series, all involving NFL football) with the highest ratings for the 2015 television season.
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These three represent the three most popular daytime television talk shows in 2015.
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Branson, Missouri is one of the leading tourist destinations in America. With a permanent population of only 6,050 in the 2000 census, it has more than 50 different theaters offering daily live performances, almost all of them devoted to country music and its derivatives. In 2009, during the worst year of the recession, it still attracted more than 7 million visitors.
Scoring
You got 0 points.
The higher your score, the thinner your bubble. The lower, the more insulated you might be from mainstream American culture.
See below for scores Charles Murray would expect you to get based on the following descriptions.
48–99: A lifelong resident of a working-class neighborhood with average television and movie going habits. Typical: 77.
42–100: A first-generation middle-class person with working-class parents and average television and movie going habits. Typical: 66.
11–80: A first-generation upper-middle-class person with middle-class parents. Typical: 33.
0–43: A second-generation (or more) upper-middle-class person who has made a point of getting out a lot. Typical: 9.
0–20: A second-generation (or more) upper-middle-class person with the television and movie going habits of the upper middle class. Typical: 2.
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