June 12, 2011
          
    
      Downsides to Class Privilege?  Hardly a Trend
    
          
        By Lisa R. Pruitt 
Two recent news reports from very different parts of the world shared this theme: Affluence can have its drawbacks.
The first story was Michael Wines, “Execution in a Killing that Fanned Class Rancor,”  which reports the execution of the son of an affluent Chinese  businessman and military official. The son, Yoa Jiaxin, stabbed to death  a “peasant” woman last fall. Jiaxin had struck the woman, who was  cycling, with his vehicle, but she suffered only minor injuries. When Jiaxin realized that she was memorizing his license plate number,  however, he attacked her with a knife.
Wines provides some class context for what happened next:
"The  crime had fanned deep public resentment against the “fu er dai,” the  “rich second generation” of privileged families who are widely believed  to commit misdeeds with impunity because of their wealth or connections."
Jiaxin  later said that he “feared the woman, a poor peasant, would ‘be hard to  deal with’ should she seek compensation for her injuries.”
      
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