Thanks to
this post by
Ken Silverstein, the Washington editor of
Harpers, I'm pointed to one of my favorite writers and stylists,
Joe Bageant. Bageant makes an
astute observation, one that helps us understand the slavishness of the political class to the ruling class (the very rich).
I'm using these terms literally, by the way. By "political class" I mean those who enter politics, win national elections, and serve as office-holders and advisers. Bill Clinton, Madeleine Albright and Tim Geithner are in this group.
By "ruling class" I mean those with enough money to finance the high cost of campaigning and "maintaining" elected officials (those bribes don't pay themselves, you know). The ruling class includes the
über-rich, people like Richard Mellon Scaife, the Coors family ("Twins for Jesus"), the
Koch brothers and
Pete Peterson. It also includes those at the top of the corporate money machines —
Jack Welch, for example, or
Jamie Dimon.
Bageant makes his point via rich, pungent prose (catch the second sentence), and in passing touches on a subject I
touched on once before.
Joe Bageant (with my intrusive emphasis):
How about them political elites, huh? Five million bucks for Chelsea Clinton's wedding, 15K just to rent the air-conditioned shitters -- huge chrome and glass babies with hot water and everything. No gas masks and waxy little squares of toilet paper for those guys.
Yes, it looks big time from the cheap seats. But the truth is that when we are looking at the political elite, we are looking at the dancing monkey, not the organ grinder who calls the tune. Washington's political class is about as upwardly removed from ordinary citizens as the ruling class is from the political class. For instance, they do not work for a living in the normal sense of a job, but rather obtain their income from abstractions such as investment and law, neither of which ever gave anybody a hernia or carpal tunnel. By comparison, the ruling class does not work at all.
Moneywise, Washington's political class is richer than the working class by the same orders of magnitude as the ruling class is richer than the political class. This gives the political class something to aim for. To that end, they have adopted the ruling elite's behaviors, tastes and lifestyles, with an eye on becoming members. Moreover, it is a molting process that begins with the right university and connections, and culminates in flying off to Washington with the rest of your generation's most privileged and ambitious young moths.
I don't agree with everything he says, but it's certainly
food for thought. Joe Bageant, ladies and gentlemen; here all week.
GP
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