HAHAhaha. Haha. Hehehe. Hehe. lol.
Maybe if you're lining up the students at Walton or Chattahoochee or Milton vs Walker or Westminster. But try doing it with Grady, or Campbell, or Marietta, or Osborne.
You live in a total fantasy land if you think there's no difference in economic or class background between Marietta High and The Walker School, even though they're probably no more than 3 miles apart. Just walk through the parking lot and count BMWs.
Cherry picking again, I see.
Come to my girls' school in Lawrenceville. I speak at chapel there twice a semester. It's about 60% white, 30% black, and 10% other. Looks just like the middle school down the street, except the way they dress. Been in dozens of private schools, and they're most all the same. How many you been in, beej?
I also see the kids in my neighborhood that my girls hang with, that go to the local public school, and all the kids at church who go to various public schools - probably close to 200 in all. If I lined 'em up, I guarantee you that you couldn't pick them out.
Now I suppose that we need to put a stipulation on this, that we need to compare apples and apples and not compare our suburban Gwinnett private school to an inner city Atlanta school. If you compare most run of the mill private schools to a public school in their neighborhood, the kids will look amazingly alike. If you compared Walton and Marietta high, you'll see just the same difference. Why are you using such a blatant a straw man for your comparison, beej. You're better than that.
In my older girl's first grade class a number of years ago, we had a boy who was learning disabled. It was amazing to see those other children learn to love him - though some were stand-offish, as I have seen public school kids be.
Other than the high-brow elite prep schools, this issue is a red herring.