User blog comment:Zabuza825/Interview a Kolhari Refugee!/@comment-4824231-20150316153259/@comment-1490093-20150316202928

Q: How would you describe your everyday life in Kolhar?

A: Outside of Kolhar, you hear of words like "equality of opportunity" and "fair treatment". Such values once existed in Kolhar as well, but the current regime has thrown them all out the window.

A second-class citizen in Kolhar is guarenteed many things in Kolhar, but everything we are provided is inferior to that of the first-classers. Everything from healthcare to insurance, legal aid, food, shelter, if you aren't born into the first-class or elevated to the first-class for assisting the regime you aren't going to have an easy time getting around.

Everyday life for a second-class citizen revolves around serving the first-class citizens. We are expected to pick up when a first-classer slacks off, we are expected to take the blame when a first-classer does somethign wrong. We are expected to endure unequal treatment and overall be subserviant to the first-classers.

Not that some first-classers had it much better, I knew some first-classers and they endured their own hardships, just not the same ones I endured. They more had to worry about discrimination by party officials for associating with a second-classer like myself, I on the other hand had to worry about getting on a first-classers bad side as if I got beaten by a first-classer, as a second-class citizen it would be my legal responsibility as I angered the first-classer for whatever reason.