I have definite dislikes about certain fringe class behaviors but mostly abhor the general "lack of class" seen in many individuals across a wide spectrum of people in today's society. I make a huge distinction though between the debating positions and mechanisms I take and use online and how I interact in person on a social basis. Online I will often take a completely different position than my true position on a topic just for fun. In person I rarely even get into discussions on politics, religion or other such topics.
I personally may dislike a person's behavior (usually for lack of ethics, lack of morality, lack of self respect, lack of compassion, lack of consideration, lack of self restraint, lack of discipline, lack of humor, lack of maturity, lack of common sense, or for being careless or disregarding of others safety) but I will always be polite or helpful to anyone in need or will walk away quietly without saying anything negative if I am greatly offended by someone or lack any respect for the individual. In situations where someone holds my family or friends in contempt or threatens harm I will respond with severe prejudice irrespective of the threatening person's social class, race, religion or political affiliation. Other than in those situations I do not think I have ever discriminated against anyone when someone has asked for help or assistance and certainly never when I was payed for a service or employed in some professional capacity. It's not within my modus operandi to discriminate since I believe in the golden rule and the principal of reciprocity : "do on to others as you would have them do onto you".
Wait, one time when I was around 9 years old think I told a tom boy girl 14 years old that she was fat and lazy because she would not help push her own weight on the park merry go round. I felt really bad when she broke into tears, threw her moon-pie and root beer to the ground and ran home crying. But I felt worse later when she came back with 2 of her big brothers. They held me down and beat me up while she stood there and laughed at me. I no longer feel too sorry for people who can cry and laugh so quickly and would probably discriminate about who I decided to go on the merry go round with if I had to do it all over again...
OD