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2026年5月16日 星期六

The Boarding School Primate: How to Breed a Tribal Chieftain

 

The Boarding School Primate: How to Breed a Tribal Chieftain

Look closely at the list of British Prime Ministers since World War II, and you are not looking at a cross-section of a modern democracy. You are looking at a highly specialized breeding program for alpha primates. Human beings, despite our tailored suits and constitutional law, are still deeply territorial pack animals. We instinctively look for a leader who can project dominance, and for over a century, the British establishment discovered that the most efficient way to manufacture one is to traumatize a boy before his eighteenth birthday.

The post-war roster splits neatly into two biological strategies: the Silverbacks of Inherited Privilege and the Hungry Climbers of the Scholarship Ladder.

The first group—Churchill, Eden, Macmillan, Cameron, Johnson—were deposited into the elite ecosystem of Eton or Harrow during their formative years. From an evolutionary perspective, these schools are institutionalized versions of the primate hierarchy. By separating young males from the emotional safety of their mothers and placing them in a hyper-competitive, ritualistic hierarchy, the system forces them to develop a thick layer of psychological armor. They learn to speak with an effortless authority, to treat the world as their inherited hunting ground, and to mask absolute ruthlessness behind polished manners. When Boris Johnson or David Cameron strolled into Downing Street, they weren't entering a new world; they were simply returning to the prefects' common room.

The second group—Thatcher, Wilson, Sunak, Starmer—presents a different kind of survival mechanism. These are the creatures who survived the selection pressure of the grammar-school scholarship. Lacking the protective canopy of aristocratic family networks, their early survival depended on intellectual hyper-fitness. A grocer’s daughter or a toolmaker's son had to run twice as fast just to reach the starting line. Their turning points before eighteen were milestones of pure utility: winning the prize, mastering the exam, adopting the rigid self-discipline of the outsider trying to breach the fort.

The dark irony of British political history is that whether a leader was bred in the cushioned nests of Eton or sharpened on the grindstone of a working-class tragedy like James Callaghan's childhood, the result is the same. The public believes it is choosing an ideology, but it is actually choosing a childhood coping mechanism. We are governed by the scars of seventeen-year-olds.





The Tribal Split: How the Financial Jungle Rewrote the Survival of the Fittest

 

The Tribal Split: How the Financial Jungle Rewrote the Survival of the Fittest

In the primal savannah, the survival of the fittest was determined by muscle, cunning, and the ability to hoard meat. In the modern asphalt jungle of Taiwan, the currency of survival has mutated. A fascinating, yet grim, comparison of Taiwan’s family wealth surveys between 1991 and 2021 reveals that the biological drive to accumulate resources has left a significant portion of the tribe completely starved in the shadows.

Over thirty years, the illusion of progress paints a shiny picture: average family net worth seemingly soared. The top 20% of wealthy families saw their riches multiply significantly. However, when adjusted for a cruel 51.97% inflation rate, the cold, cynical reality emerges. The wealthiest segment grew 2.59 times richer, while the bottom 20% actually shrunk to just 65% of their purchasing power from three decades ago. The poor didn't just stay poor; they became evolutionary collateral damage in a changing ecosystem.

Thirty years ago, the tribal elders blamed real estate for this division. The narrative was simple: the poor lacked land. Yet, fast forward to modern data, and the real estate gap between the top and bottom fifth has actually narrowed relative to each other. The true engine of inequality shifted silently to the abstract realm of financial assets—stocks, bonds, and equities. The top 20% accumulated massive financial portfolios while keeping debt minimal, while the bottom 20% drowned in financial liabilities that far outweighed their meager holdings.

This is the modern manifestation of resource hoarding. High earners channeled surplus income into the digital hunting grounds of the stock market, multiplying their dominance through compounding growth. Meanwhile, those at the bottom struggled with basic biological subsistence, leaving zero surplus to invest, or fell prey to poorly calculated financial risks.

This economic chasm explains the raging war over urban housing. Prime locations—with access to better foraging grounds, medicine, and safety—are heavily contested. Since the top 20% represents hundreds of thousands of affluent households with immense purchasing power, they naturally bid up the prices. For the bottom 20%, whose ancestral wealth has actively withered, the soaring prices evoke a profound sense of tribal abandonment. This isn’t just a ledger imbalance; it is a ticking socio-political time bomb that will inevitably reshape the future nature of power, resentment, and leadership within the territory.