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Wall Street Journal Op-Ed Bemoans the end of "The Late, Great American WASP"

POSTED BY: NIKI2
UPDATED: Thursday, December 26, 2013 12:21
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Monday, December 23, 2013 1:53 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Quote:

In Saturday’s paper and online, author Joseph Epstein mourns the collapse of what he describes as the “genuine ruling class, drawn from what came to be known as the WASP establishment,” (WASP, the commonly-held acronym for White, Anglo-Saxon Protestant). Instead, he argues, we are living in a meritocracy, governed not by an elite subset of the uppermost crust of society but rather by a group of people who overcame some kind of adversity and achieved success thanks to their own merits, not based on what family they were born into. This, according to Epstein, is a tragedy.

Epstein’s embrace of white privilege (or is it power?) is almost too transparent, resembling something closer to satire than to outright racism. And yet he gives no reason to believe that he isn’t completely serious when he argues that modern day “corruption, scandal and incompetence” are hallmarks exclusive to this new era of non-white rule. Or when he memorializes the virtues of keeping those not born into the “WASPocracy” away from the halls of power.

Instead, Epstein argues, we should return to an era of WASP rule. Why? Because rich, white men born into rich, white christian families would never lead the country astray:
Quote:

A financier I know who grew up under the WASP standard not long ago told me that he thought that the subprime real estate collapse and the continuing hedge-fund scandals have been brought on directly by men and women who are little more than “greedy pigs” (his words) without a shred of character or concern for their clients or country. Naturally, he added, they all have master’s degrees from the putatively best business schools in the nation.

Thus far in their history, meritocrats, those earnest good students, appear to be about little more than getting on, getting ahead and (above all) getting their own. The WASP leadership, for all that may be said in criticism of it, was better than that.


Much more at http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304367204579268301
043949952





It's a pretty amazing article, and truly, more worthy of satire than to be taken seriously...only he IS serious, apparently.

Some excerpts:
Quote:

The U.S. once had an unofficial but nonetheless genuine ruling class, drawn from what came to be known as the WASP establishment. Members of this establishment dominated politics, economics and education, but they do so no longer. The WASPocracy, as I think of it, lost its confidence and, with it, the power and interest to lead.
....
WASPs were a caste, closed off to all not born within it, with the possible exception of those who crashed the barriers by marrying in. WASP credentials came with lineage, and lineage—that is, proper birth—automatically brought connections to the right institutions.
....
The State Department was once dominated by WASPs, and so, too, was the Supreme Court, with one seat traditionally left unoccupied for a Jewish jurist of proper mien.
....
So dominant was WASP culture that some wealthy families who didn't qualify by lineage attempted to imitate and live the WASP life. The Catholic Kennedys were the most notable example. The Kennedy compound at Hyannis Port—the sailing, the clothes, the touch football played on expansive green lawns—was pure WASP mimicry, all of it, except that true WASPs were too upstanding to go in for the unscrupulous business dealings of Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. or the feckless philanderings of him and some of his sons. That the Kennedys did their best to imitate WASP life is perhaps not surprising, for in their exclusion, the Irish may have felt the sting of envy for WASPocracy more than any others.
....
The last WASP president was George H.W. Bush, but there is reason to believe he wasn't entirely proud of being a WASP. At any rate, he certainly wasn't featuring it. When running for office he made every attempt to pass himself off as a Texan, declaring a passion for pork rinds and a love for the music of the Oak Ridge Boys. (His son George W. Bush, even though he can claim impeccable WASP lineage and went to the right schools, seems otherwise to have shed all WASPish coloration and become an authentic Texan, happily married to a perfectly middle-class librarian.)
....
Much can be—and has been—written about the shortcomings of the WASPocracy. As a class, it was exclusionary and hence tolerant of social prejudice, if not often downright snobbish. Tradition-minded, it tended to be dead to innovation and social change. Imagination wasn't high on its list of admired qualities.

Yet the WASP elite had dignity and an impressive sense of social responsibility. In a 1990 book called "The Way of the Wasp," Richard Brookhiser held that the chief WASP qualities were "success depending on industry; use giving industry its task; civic-mindedness placing obligations on success, and antisensuality setting limits to the enjoyment of it; conscience watching over everything."

Under WASP hegemony, corruption, scandal and incompetence in high places weren't, as now, regular features of public life. Under WASP rule, stability, solidity, gravity and a certain weight and aura of seriousness suffused public life. As a ruling class, today's new meritocracy has failed to provide the positive qualities that older generations of WASPs provided.
....
Trust, honor, character: The elements that have departed U.S. public life with the departure from prominence of WASP culture have not been taken up by the meritocrats.



And on and on and on! It's a pretty incredible article, and speaks volumes about a certain mentality. What amazes me is that he can claim this "WASPocracy" didn't have "corruption, scandal and incompetence in high places" like we have "now", that "WASPs were too upstanding to go in for the unscrupulous business dealings of Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. or the feckless philanderings of him and some of his sons" and on and on...that anyone actually BELIEVES this bullshit is patently amazing to me.

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Monday, December 23, 2013 2:22 PM

AGENTROUKA


Wow. Being ruled by a pseudo-aristocracy was better because they "put their country first". Except for how everyone not belonging to it had it worse then than they do now. Seems they put their own interest first.

Also, paraphrased, "They ruled the country. For anyone who didn't like how the country was run, they were an easy target." More like the legitimate target?

What a bizarre article.

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Monday, December 23, 2013 2:27 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Amazing, isn't it? I read the whole article and all I could think of, paragraph after paragraph, was "wow...what world did this guy LIVE in??" It's more, as I see it, because we KNOW more (and know it more immediately) about the bullshit going on "behind the scenes" that we're aware of all the corruption, etc., around us, not that it wasn't THERE before...just weird.

How he can really believe this "WASPocracy" was "too upstanding to go in for the unscrupulous business dealings of Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. or the feckless philanderings of him and some of his sons" blows my mind...among other things... ;o)


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Thursday, December 26, 2013 12:21 PM

NEWOLDBROWNCOAT


Mr. Epstein should be careful about what he wishes for.

For a long time people named Epstein were Jewish, and were discriminated against by those WASPs ( 'member that's what that P stands for, Protestant).

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