I believe that the gap between the rich and the poor in the country will become wider and wider, and the sense of fragmentation brought about by the dual development of urban and rural areas will also alienate people from different regions.

I went from the county primary school to the county key junior high school, the high school to the city key school, and the university to a certain 985 school in Shanghai. Along the way, the sense of fragmentation I saw was really strong. Most of the students in primary school are self-employed. When they get to the county key junior high school, most of them come from the families who are employed by the government. When they get to the city's key high school, OK, there begin to appear many classmates whose families are state-owned enterprises or university teachers, and even more so when they get to university. Of course, the strongest sense of fragmentation is in high school. After all, it is too homogeneous. The class is basically all the children of well-known state-owned university professors. They are very unique in appearance and spirit. They have trendy new clothes and hidden secrets. Ideal braces, femtosecond laser myopia correction, saxophone music specialty, a sports specialty, etc. All of these are so different from my former classmates in elementary school and junior high school. At the same time, high school classmates will also be surprised that less than 50% of people in county junior high schools can go to high school. After all, for their urban children, more than 80% of their elementary school classmates can go to college, and in my elementary school Only 4 of the 46 people in the class went to college, including a junior college student and a second-year undergraduate student. It makes me sad to see this sense of separation. I don’t understand what kind of world this is and what kind of socialism it is.