Indledning
Middle income "treadmill families" have become the new victims of Britain's growing social mobility crisis, government warns. Social mobility is something not everybody notices.

Only the less fortunate suffer from poor social mobility. Only one-in-a-thousand Free School Meal (FMO) pupils get accepted to Oxbridge in the UK, and the number diminishes every year.

One of thekey priorities of the Prime Minister in 2015 was to put a stop to the poorsocial mobility; however,the Chairman at the commissionAlan Milburn, does not think the Prime Minister's"big ambitions" match her "big actions," and neither does Poppy Noor whose article I will be analyzing.

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Uddrag
The sender is Poppy Noor, who is a woman with Indian roots. She grew up in England but lives in New York, USA today.

She is a features writer for The Guardian US. In 2012 she graduated from The University of Cambridge, one of the most prestigious schools in the UKalong with Oxford.

Later she graduated from GoldsmithsUniversity of London with a master's degree in journalism withdistinction .

Noor bases her knowledge and ethos on the fact that she is a part of the affected group. She knows what it feels like to get her opportunities "blocked" by her background.

However, being a part of the affected group also gives her a bias as she wants you to sympathize with her and others in the same situation.