Rich People Things
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You must keep a gimlet eye, too, on the myriad people and institutions that safeguard your gilded status: politicians, newspapers, financial instruments, branches of government. They all belong to you. But staying on top of what they’re up to is a full time job. What’s an overstretched gazillionaire to do?
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Reviews for Rich People Things
3 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Very prescient. This is a timeless book the explains the venality of the rich. Must reading for young people to understand the life ahead of them. Props to Lehmann for letting it all hang out.
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Rich People Things - Chris Lehmann
Cover
RICH PEOPLE THINGS
Half Title
RICH PEOPLE THINGS
Chris Lehmann
OR BOOKS
NEW YORK
Title Page
Copyright
© 2010 Chris Lehmann.
Published by OR Books, New York.
Visit our website at www.orbooks.com
First printing 2010.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any
form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording,
or any information storage retrieval system, without permission in writing from
the publisher, except brief passages for review purposes.
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data:
A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress
British Library Cataloging in Publication Data:
A catalog record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN paperback 978–1–935928–12–6
ISBN e-book 978–1–935928–13–3
Typeset by Wordstop
Printed by BookMobile, USA
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
CONTENTS
Introduction
1: The US Constitution
2: The New York Times
3: Meritocracy
4: Populism
5: David Brooks
6: The Free Market
7: The Stock Market
8: Class Warfare
9: The Democratic Party
10: The Prosperity Gospel
11: Wired Magazine
12: The Creative Class
13: Malcolm Gladwell
14: Reality Television
15: Damien Hirst
16: Ayn Rand
17: The Memoir
18: The Supreme Court
19: Higher Learning
20: The Troubled Asset Relief Program
21: The Lobbying World
22. Libertarianism
23: The iPad
24. Steve Forbes
25: Alan Greenspan
26: The Sporting Life
Conclusion: The Language Problem
Notes
Introduction
American class privilege is very much like the idea of sex in a Catholic school—it’s not supposed to exist in the first place, but once it presents itself in your mind’s eye, you realize that it’s everywhere. And as with the upholders of adolescent propriety for the Mother Church, the forces of repression in our political economy are well armed with orthodox articles of faith. Social critics and academicians have expended heroic amounts of ink to explain America’s exceptionalist
indifference to the distinctions of class—from the absence of a feudal tradition to the frontier thesis to the convulsions of upward social mobility across the generations. Scholars appealing to these forces have all preached, in one way or another, that the condition of wage earning in the New World is but a passing way station on the path to real wealth and entitlement. Why, after all, should anyone militate on behalf of the interests of an American working class when no one intends to remain within its ranks for very long? And, conversely, why should anyone insist there’s anything amiss with a society that lavishly coddles those who are fabulously well-to-do when we all long to be borne aloft in their company?
These are, to be sure, compelling explanations of our country’s curiously complacent outlook on the politics of wealth and privilege—but they also seem more than a little pat. Canada, after all, had a western frontier and no strong attachment to feudal tradition, and has nonetheless spawned a robust labor-led politics, a single-payer health-care system, and a rather hale welfare state securing basic income supports and social equality. Social mobility has of late been higher in the allegedly fusty Old World social orders of Britain, Denmark, and Sweden—places that can lay a far more legitimate claim to the conservative epithet socialist
than the business-friendly centrism of the Obama Democratic policy elite—than in the deindustrializing, debt-ridden United States.
If we’re to understand the stubborn resistance to the idea of social class—especially in the wake of the Great Recession of 2008, which all too plainly elevated the fortunes of the financial elite over the notional prosperity of America’s declining middle orders—we’d do well to relax our fealty to the ironclad determinism of past explanations. In the spirit of the suggestible Catholic student, we should recur instead to the piecemeal psychology of the absent presence—to look more closely at the freestanding institutions that reinforce and strategically update the coordinates of the reigning social consensus on economic reward and punishment.
From this vantage, the lionization of wealth becomes less a fixed catechism in the American creed than a contingent set of post hoc rationalizations—attached here to the idea of undeviatingly gargantuan executive compensation for the financial elite, and there to the business press’s delusional romance with the ever-mythical free market. This outlook has the advantage of making our state of chronic class denial much less forbidding than it would be as a destiny-shaping verdict handed down from our colonial past. But neither is that to say that its social power is diluted by virtue of its comparative rootlessness. Quite the contrary, in fact—the paper-thin and amnesiac way that we continue to reckon with questions of wealth and social privilege accounts in large part for its staying power. Writing in 1956 of the formative consensus that took shape on these issues during the Cold War, C. Wright Mills observed that it hinged on a PR vision of overclass achievement, whereby liberals and conservatives alike found the power elite to be diversified to the point of powerlessness. So far as power is concerned, nobody really makes decisions; let us fall back upon official and formal images of representative government. So far as wealth or high income is concerned, that is without decisive consequence, although it does perhaps affect the tone of society at large. Besides, everybody in America is rich nowadays. This unserious liberalism is the nerve-center of the present-day conservative mood.
1
That statement serves as a letter-perfect diagnosis of our socioeconomic plight more than half a century later—save that it’s now a tad harder for consensus thinkers to insist that every American is rich. Nonetheless, it’s been striking to observe just how little the present crisis has altered the basic terms of political engagement on all sides. When the US economy veered toward cataclysm in the 1890s and the 1930s, mass political movements registered a new national distemper. The People’s Party of the late nineteenth century went so far as to advocate an alternate production-based system of currency and exchange, known as the Subtreasury, a reform that eventually got watered down into the Free Silverite attack on the gold standard when the party fused with the Democrats in 1896. And the thirties, of course, witnessed the enactment of many of the core reforms first advanced during the populist and Progressive eras—public ownership of utilities, federally funded income support and retirement plans, enormous national public works projects, and the like.
One might reasonably ask what it would take for the basic truths of class division to sink in on today’s American scene, after the reckless expansion of our paper economy has consigned entire productive sectors of business enterprise into the dustbin of history; after the bailed-out financier class continues to rack up obscene performance bonuses on the government dime; after the securitization of debt has left millions of American homes foreclosed, and millions more underwater. Instead, we remain in thrall to an unserious liberalism that continues to entrust most major economic policy decisions to career investment bankers, and to a conservative movement rhetoric that equates populism
with heartland-approved consumption habits and evangelical culture-wars posturing.
In this deeply incoherent state of affairs, it’s little wonder that conservatives were able to oppose a stimulus plan that actually lowered taxes for the vast majority of Americans by characterizing it as a feckless big-government tax increase. Or that the anemic final version of health-care reform—larded with massive giveaways to the insurance and pharmaceutical lobbies—can be widely depicted as a government takeover
of American medicine or, indeed, as full-blown socialism.
We appear to have descended to the point where political economy, formerly the central organizing force in our national politics, has become a floating signifier, intended to say more about the demographic profile of individual political actors than anything about the collective cast of our productive lives, and how the rewards for our labor can be distributed more fairly and equitably.
Among other things, this state of affairs leaves leaders and policy makers unable to offer coherent accounts of who is meant to benefit from efforts to revive and revamp our financial sector, our rights to form unions, or our system of health care delivery. If such incremental reforms come across in much of political discourse as perverse and sweeping expressions of an undifferentiated liberal lust for power, then prospects for meaningful change—truly nationalized health care, finance overhauls that reward productive industry ahead of speculation in the paper economy, dismantling of the savage inequalities that still govern housing markets, and education funding—seem like nothing more than utopian fantasy.
* * * *
When I began writing Rich People Things, I had nothing quite so sweeping—or so dispiriting—in mind. Indeed, the whole thing came about by accident. In early 2009, a couple of old laid-off editor friends e-mailed me about a Web site they were launching (called the Awl, for some reason) and invited me to contribute. At the time, I filed the idea pretty far back in my memory bank—especially since, as my friends explained in their pitch letter, they’d be unable to pay their writers. But a few weeks after the project launched, another friend directed me to a cover story that ran in my former workplace, New York magazine, itemizing the widespread sense of grievance and entitlement among the city’s lords of finance in the wake of public outrage over the Troubled Asset Relief Program’s no-strings giveaways to the financial sector.
Since I knew all too well the inside-the-bubble mindset behind this quisling dispatch from the money wars—the celebration of the money culture being the de facto mission statement for Adam Moss’s New York magazine—I knew I couldn’t stay quiet. And I also knew, the deferential politics of the publishing world being what they are, that whatever I wrote could only see the light of day at a place like the Awl. So I wrote my friends, duly submitted a piece, and just as it was about to go live, coeditor Alex Balk wrote to explain that his colleague, Choire Sicha, designed a graphic for this with the rubric, ‘Rich People Things.’ Does that work for you?
To which I replied, ‘um, sure?’ It was a fait accompli in any event, Alex replied, since Choire had
gallivanted off to lunch"—though they could easily just erase the rubric when he got back.
I don’t know when Choire returned, but by that time, we’d all moved on to other things, and in the next week or so, I didn’t give Rich People Things
much thought, either as a column title or an ongoing writing project. Thanks to another friend, though, I came across another dispatch that showcased unthinking press fealty to economic privilege—this time, a Washington Post front page piece about how the Obama administration’s spending priorities would unduly punish taxpayers earning more than $250,000 a year. This prospect, as the Post correspondents saw it, could well place small-business owners and upward-striving professionals—two plum political constituencies that broke for Obama in 2008—at odds with the allegedly ambitious social agenda of the fledgling Obama administration. As both tax analysis and political kibitzing, the article reeked of horseshit—especially since a number of the items on Obama’s ambitious social agenda, such as federally backed health insurance, would significantly aid the bottom lines for small-business entrepreneurs.
Once my eye had grown sufficiently jaundiced, I started to see material for the column everywhere—in lunatic manifestos from Steve Forbes on corporate leadership and entire cover packages in major newsweeklies addressing the future of work without containing so much as a single passing mention of labor unions. Even though the United States was enduring its worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, our major organs of opinion, most of the leadership in Congress and the regulatory world, and nearly all the major organs of the business press were carrying on serenely as though American society remained more a study in moneyed abandon than abandoned money.
I fancy myself a fairly practiced cynic, but it struck me that my randomly acquired beat was profoundly out of sync with the state of the real economy, so much so that the familiar run of business coverage and economic commentary started to strike my ear as exceedingly strange. It all seemed not so much a hard-nosed appraisal of the way the world really works as a species of magical incantation, worthy of the witches in the opening scene of Macbeth. From the point of view of my own journalistic production, this was a great boon; finding suitable column fare was generally not much more arduous than taking in a Money magazine feature on, say, the damage the downturn had wrought on exclusive golf clubs, letting the outrage sink in, and opening up a fresh Word document on the computer.
Slowly, though, it dawned on me that the odd pleasure of putting the column together each week served as a footnote of sorts to the more-or-less permanent character of these United States. The omission of real economic conditions from the accounting of the republic’s collective life was something that ran very deep—if also very diffusely—in our history. Unbidden, long-dormant snatches of my graduate history education started to tug at me and worked their way into the margins of the column. It became starkly evident, for instance, that one couldn’t snipe at Newsweek’s saucer-eyed speculations about whether the new generation of young workers would be unduly stingy about floating more of their incomes into the consumer economy in order to jump-start still-skittish demand without also noting that the last generation of deeply traumatized American savers—those who came of working age during the Great Depression—had the assurance of a robust public sector, a fairly militant labor movement, and the informal social contract binding together business, labor, and government in common aims of enterprise. All these factors helped ensure that the wages of Depression-era wageworkers at least kept pace with the inflationary pressures that came with economic growth, once it finally arrived. All today’s young workers had, by contrast, were the rancid leavings of the Reagan-inspired war on New Deal social protections—together with the banker-friendly policy initiatives of a craven New Democrat
leadership on the other side of the partisan aisle.
Rich People Things began life as an afterthought title for a column without any particular mission statement to push it forward; but I later realized that this pointedly dismissive phrase took in a good many more trends, movements, and institutions than I’d first assumed. What were the US Constitution, the perpetual campaign-and-election season, the civic religion of celebrity worship, urban development policies, and the cloistered state of high-literary debate, if not also Rich People Things in their own right? Why not, then, widen the aperture of my accidental column to take in more of the long view of the American scene? This is not to advance, mind you, any overarching materialist explanation of our past—strict economic determinism isn’t an especially persuasive vision of history, and is anything but a lively one. Rather, the conceit of this book is something infinitely more modest—an effort to apply the roving one-hit methodology of an online column, typically composed with the phrase Can you believe this shit?
ringing in my ears, to somewhat sturdier features of our common life. In the impressionistic tract that follows, I’ve occasionally cannibalized my other published work, both in the Awl and elsewhere, as it pertains to the expanding Rich People Things waterfront, but mainly I’ve just sought to imagine how the writing persona I’ve developed in the post-meltdown aughts would be provoked, baffled, and generally trigger happy if the Doc’s time machine plunked him back down in the US history colloquia that formed the backbone of his long-ago graduate instruction. It’s been cathartic, if nothing else, and I trust that you, dear reader, might find a similar tonic effect in these wayward musings.
Rich People Thing No. 1:
The US Constitution
It’s no exaggeration to say that the great confoundment of common sense that Americans bring to the class question is rooted in the very founding of the American republic. The ratification of the US Constitution has been accorded an exalted place in our civic mythology. Long before Glenn Beck began to heap his incoherent adoration on the Founding Fathers, early historians of the United States such as George Bancroft spoke of our Constitution in full seriousness as the fulfillment of God’s will, The movement of the divine power which gives unity to the universe, and order and connection to events.
1
In reality, the debate over the Constitution was nowhere near so orderly; rather, it exposed the many divisions of social rank then assailing the fledgling United States. In the prosperous agricultural valleys of the fertile American colonies, planters formed huge landed estates—and put themselves forward immodestly as the model citizens and legislators of the new American nation after they had won their independence from the British Crown. One of the central propagandists for the ratification of the Constitution, John Jay,