The Secretive Schools that Teach the World’s Richest Kids (Documentary)

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So children with zero clue on what it is to be a citizen who works for a living, are being taught to lead people they have zero association with? What could go wrong?

RobbedPierreDeus
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I sign up my kid for every extracurricular activity I can afford.

Check out government programs around your area, ask about payment plans, sibling discounts. Go to public libraries, talk to your kids about school, give them productive hobbies - art, music, sports... there's ways around it.

Sure, we can't compete with the 1% but we can still support our children's academic and social lives.

karl
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Lets be honest, its all about the connections. You can have good ideas but when you do not have connections this means nothing

Gizzmo
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I was on plane with a teacher from one of these schools, she said "we dont teach them how to read and write, thats a waste of time, we teach them human empathy so hopefully in the future when they are in charge of the world, they may show mercy". True story

caralynnicole
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Training future elites for critical thinking and creativity. But other institutions teach conformity and thinking in line with others. This is a prime example of why I'll be home schooling my kids.

Seen a kid home schooled who was on Trig at 10 and taking organic chem at the same age. That is a future elite.

MaxWhao
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When I tell people those who control the world are in the same group and even a lot of them grow up together, people start laughing.

flydutchmen
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When I was a teenager I asked my parents if I could go to school there...the downside of being an only child is having a family that's overprotective, so they dismissed the idea out of hand. And to think, today I could be BFFs with kings and the children of the Beatles.

Thvndar
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In the US these types of schools are uniquely intertwined with sports. Especially hockey and lacrosse. Either you are a multimillionaire or a sports prodigy (Tabor, Saint George, Gunnery, and Phillips Exeter are some examples in the northeast US.) I grew up in a small town with lots of talented hockey players who were able to go to these schools that costed 50-80k USD a year for 0-5k a year on sports scholarship.

MrSoccerplayr
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11:17 - You can be poor and miserable too. Your parents might take out all their frustration on you, ruining your psyche and your life. I would rather be rich and aimless than poor and aimless. At least as a rich kid, I wouldn't *need* to work. And if I *want* a job, I can easily get one.

FrostyPeace
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This isnt bad, it actually inspires me to get more involved with my kids education. The challenge out here in poor people land is battling distractions. Even as adults, obtaining success is about battling distractions.

lordlynkz
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I just got back from a Euro trip to the wealthiest places for the wealthiest events - most of the mega rich kids over the age of 21 that I met were all super polite, nice, generous. The children below that age though were insufferable

brunosouza
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Meanwhile, the rest of us watch after every penny, starve and learn nothing about the real world in school.
It's all by design...

leifwulffstephan
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I'm sure they don't need those schools to be successful. It's just a place where all the rich kids go. So they don't make friends with other kids, not in their social class.

zendog
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Rosey campus gives off the vibes of Harry Potter's Hogwarts where it is only accessible and known to a secret and powerful society.

ShibaMcDripNu
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Something entertaining (at least to me) which I realized with the Finnish ban on private schooling. In practice, this serves to shield the ultra-rich from potential competitors even further by limiting the access to private education to those who have the means to send their kids abroad. Thus, the middle classes, together with the lesser rich of Finland are deprived from the advantages that come with privatized education. Which substantially reduces the chances that some nouveau riche upstart will popup and dethrone the established elites. I mean, if this measure was really such a grandiose equalizer, wouldn’t they have fought hard against it?

fleckensteleworm
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I attended Le Rosey for 2 years in the early 2010s as a teenager and although Jake captures how different the lives of some of the students are from regular people it doesn’t even scrape the tip of the iceberg. Most of my classmates would jet home on the weekends across Europe to spend time with their families and friends. Even thought the level of wealth seems so far above everything else there is still so many levels within the school of wealth. My parents are self made and many people in my position including myself were sniffed out quickly by the students with generational wealth. I hated it. I left halfway through my second year because I couldn’t stand it, my parents sent me there with the same intentions as most of the other parents that send their kids to these types of schools but the culture is so toxic.

FearedTheory
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The network effects of these elite schools matter more than the cost of tuition. I had a friend who attended Le Rosey in Switzerland. All the classmates came from powerful and wealthy families, and his parents were super wealthy also.

naranbaz
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Kim Jong Un went to that CIA boarding school in Switzerland

blockpartyvintage
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When you see a successful person that is rumored to only be successful because of "daddies money", that's not the case. It's because of the private institutions and schools they went to which lead them to network with one another early on, which also helps because majority of the children there have venture capitalists as parents which means your startup becoming successful is not far fetched at all.

prodbyuntitled
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I strongly disagree with abolishing private schools. Tearing don others is not the solution. The solution is to increase the quality of public education, remove all the bureaucracy, and stop training kids to just be wage slaves. Model the private schools as well as you can with less money

Trizzer