May I ask, NellG, what makes you think I am angry. I am certainly upset by the recent pile-on, started, it appears, by my use of the word "solipsism". I do find the playground behaviour that followed quite amazing from a group of those who purport to be adults. It seems that from that one word various grandparents, sadly it seems to be women attacking a woman, think they can guess a person's education and previous employment, both of which they come across as believing to be either 'less than' or not normal for this group. I was left with a very vague view of why such assumed personal characteristics were mentioned other than to add to the playground trope that a difference means you can be personally attacked.
But back to the OP:
By far the most disturbing inequality at the moment concerns unemployment. Nearly 50% think people have lost their jobs because of underachievement. Only 31% think job loss is attributable to bad luck. Apparently, by 57% to 39% Conservative voters are more likely to accept poor performance as the reason for job losses.
This type of thinking is, as MOnica would say a 'tired old stereotype'. It is leftover from extreme 'religious' views, or at least that is where such views once found their home. These would have you declare your "sins"; the sins which caused your destitution or, sadly, illness and disability. This is the stereotype now used by the Conservative party and its members and followers. It feels, as does the renual of Victorian destitution, to be a throwback and that is how it should be seen; a throwback often contrived to cover the flaws in our benefits system, our insurance. We are probably about to see one of the fastest and deepest rises in destitution because of Covid - yes, but also because of the way the party currently in power treats people.
How does this make me feel? Just think of yourself, standing on a street corner, telling people their sins are the reason why their child is blind or has had polio as people once did or the reason why you are destitute and you will have some idea about how much I despise the thinking of the Conservative party, it's hangers-on and others who still feel like this about the unemployed, and how sad I am that we have learned so little and the only thing I can do about this attitude to others is cast a vote once every four years and hope.
I do see this changing in the young. The sort of "playground behaviour" I described, which occurs because of a perceived difference, seems to be less than it once was in playgrounds at least and education - that despised by some on here increase in real knowledge - is moving us forward too, but sadly never quickly enough for those that have to bear not only poverty but the slings and arrows of outrageous vilifiers.