
Daniel L. answered 10/22/20
Bachelor's in English
Paul the Anarchist, though he was a wealthy Ivy League student, considered himself a working class iconoclast, and had a penchant for expatiating on the benighted state of the common man. He often wrote long form pieces which he would post on his anonymous personal blog, for he eschewed the "bourgeois hellscape" of Facebook, in which he would criticize the poor for allowing the rich to use them "as their personal robot servants," and attempted to tear away at the very fabric of social institutions. His posts, which he linked to his Twitter, were often met with approbation from his fellow well-off college students. In fact, it seemed that speaking condescendingly about social issues and pretending to be oppressed had become something of a credo for Paul and his friends, despite their theories offering no empirical evidence and being based entirely on logical fallacies.