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・ Professional Action Learning
・ Professional administration
・ Professional Adventure Writer
・ Professional Agriculture Management Services (PAMS)
・ Professional agrologist
・ Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization
・ Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (1968)
・ Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (2003)
・ Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (AFSCME)
・ Professional amateur
・ Professional American football championship games
・ Professional Amigos of Comic Art Society
・ Professional and Amateur Pinball Association
・ Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992
・ Professional and Linguistic Assessments Board
Professional and working class conflict in the United States
・ Professional Artist (magazine)
・ Professional Arts Consortium
・ Professional association
・ Professional Association for Childcare and Early Years
・ Professional Association for SQL Server
・ Professional Association of Diving Instructors
・ Professional Association of Foreign Service Officers
・ Professional Association of Internes and Residents of Ontario
・ Professional Association of Magistrates
・ Professional Association of Nurse Travelers
・ Professional Association of Therapeutic Horsemanship
・ Professional audio
・ Professional audiovisual industry
・ Professional Aviation Maintenance Association


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Professional and working class conflict in the United States : ウィキペディア英語版
Professional and working class conflict in the United States
In the United States there has long been a conflict between the working class majority and the professional class. The conflict goes back to the workers revolution and age of unionized labor in the late nineteenth century. Since the 1870s and the rise of professionalism, the daily routine of American workers has been largely designed by professionals instead of foremen.
Today, most American workers –many of whom earn middle-range incomes and work in white-collar occupations – are usually not resentful of the professionals, though a feeling of disconnect persists. Even nowadays there is a large visible discrepancy between professionals whose main job duties include visualizing and directing the day of other workers and those who carry out the orders. While the work of professionals and managers is usually largely self-directed and appeals to the interest of the individual, that of middle-range income white-collar and blue-collar workers is closely supervised and tends to greatly stray from the worker's actual interests.
Yet another reason for resentment toward the professional middle class on the part of the working class stems from the embedded feelings of anti-intellectualism. When combined working class workers seem to often be under the impression that their better paid, professional managers are not actually "doing anything" as most of their duties are to conceptualize and outline their ideas.
==The student movement==

In the 1960s, tensions between classes flared up again. The student protestors, many of whom had deferments and were therefore exempt from fighting in the Vietnam War, were generally the youth of the professional middle class. Though the student protestors envisioned solidarity with the working class as a means of opposing "establishment" policies with regard to war, race, and other social issues, the student protestors' lack of support for the Vietnam War, as well as generalized antipathy toward youthful rebellion, alienated the working classes.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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