Or is it like life peerages now - not inherited, and usually bought outright?
This segues into the trad discussions. If a tree falls in the middle of no-where, does it matter?
I have known more than a few people who've been sadly able to demonstrate an uncanny ability to fall many classes in under a decade - let alone a lifetime. Never having believed that class is some spiritual quality divorced from culture and personality and speech, it seems to me that mainstream culture in 2007 is ideally constituted to encourage high-speed class demotion across all strata.
This brings us back to my first question: does this not make it all lthe more difficult for the ambitious to rise in their social class? Or, perhaps, they've already won the war by re-defining class as net worth...and therefore avoiding the almost impenetrable minefields that class ascension has traditionally been stymied with.
Thoughts?
Provocative question. Perhaps we could solicit the opinion of Sir Mick.
Last edited by Horace (2007-02-21 03:48:53)
Very interesting. It's a complex subject and something of a moving target but my own observations are that more people know theres something about well bred people than you would think. Although America doesnt have titles, we do have circles of values. On top of that there is "golden rule" behavior which is practiced more or less
Now the sad part is, at least for me, that someone can have the best attitude and personality and demeanor and morals and still not be considered an equal socially to someone who's behavior is treacherous but still part of your class. The old, your mailman is an awesome guy but you still dont have dinner with him but with that awful brute from the club.
The good news is that just about everyone who isnt insane or a scumbag reacts positively to being treated with respect, courtesy and dignity. Typically, if you practice these well in America, the sky is the limit. This is the theory of manners and breeding and restraint, typically a part of the upper classes because they have more leisure time to develop it but certainly avaialble to everyone. I would imagine the ideal of the American middle class is to spread this sort of civilized behavior to as many households as possible, a mission which outsourcing might erode.
A complex subject indeed, and people dont like it here so it never gets hashed out. It's amazing how much money can modify the truth here though. Ive seen the rudest, bootstrapped slum pigs and people go on about what a "gentleman" he is. One little guy at a "function" forced his way past me by literally pushing his little paw into my rib cage. Well I have to say he was accidentally tripped and his resulting involuntary stumbling forward was quite comic. I told him I was frightfully sorry and asked him if he was alright, pointing out that it was fortunate that he was low enough to the ground already to be able the better to catch his fall. I am nothing if not compassionate.
the only people with class are good people
1.Exactly, sloaney!!!
2.For me, the only people who tend to be obsessed with the very subject of "class" are usually mean-spirited, physically unattractive, prissy people who've basically created a superficial caste system in order to TRY to make the rest fo the world feel as inadequate as they do every day of their lives. Too much, for them, relies on where something is purchased, "provenances and pedigrees". Pathetic.
So much concentration is put upon so many superficial matters, they always wind up having the most precarious financial situations and the most dysfunctional families, whaich leads me back to sloaney's comment, "The only people with class are good people".
Startlingly profound, true, and in only one sentence!!
tips for Squire:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBjaim-NXM8
"If the Spanish maid brings in her boyfriend and he’s drunk and he pisses
in the driveway or something... That’s uncomfortable. Like, how do you deal with that.
Um, that’s not a particularly good example because WASPs piss in driveways all the
time, but...." - Langthorne Phipps
Class? Lots of people in the US hate to talk about it, if they feel trapped. But America is the mobile place where people can climb a class or at least try to do it. We have no aristocracy other than the wealthy, artists & writers or the famous. But it's mainly measured by money or the appearance of money. Good character is often denigrated or ignored.
We're the land of pirates who become wealthy and a generation or two later they become old money. Or prohibition booze smugglers like Joseph Kennedy whose children become tragic, woman destroying, American royalty. Many women partnered with Kennedy men, such as Marilyn Monroe, only to suffer in the end.
But that's the great thing about America, the Horatio Alger fable. Start out saving money whether by legitimate hard work in business or by selling drugs, then send your kids to an Ivy league school. Viola! You're in the club. Well maybe the really old money families don't think you're in, but everybody else will accept your new social class. Once they have that literate mind & ability to express themselves with their voice and whatever ambition they may have we see what their character reveals. In the first half of the 1900's and still among some people who believed hard work, good character, thrift and frugality are rewarded by God with prosperity. This was a part of WASP character for a long time and you saw it in so many novels from the last century.
Me? I like people who are intelligent, read a book every so often, have a sense of humor and treat each other with honesty and respect. That's classy enough for me.
Last edited by edhillpr (2008-01-11 08:59:47)
I don't have it and never will. I only know it by relation, and that's ok.
Sir Peregrine Worsthorne (what a name) has his own angle:
http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/index.php?storyID=6774
Celebrate the death of social mobility
In recent weeks there have been a spate of articles, as much from Conservative pundits as from Labour ones, deploring Britain's loss of social mobility.
Not enough people, apparently, are trying to climb up the social ladder; far fewer, sad to say, than in the bad old days. In the name of social justice, they all intone, 'something must be done about it'.
What none of these pundits ever consider is the possibility that a lack of social mobility might be a healthy development; a sign that most people nowadays - apart from the underclass - are content with where they are and do not want to elbow themselves up a rung or two of the social ladder.
To my mind that should be regarded as progress rather than retrogression, since the whole point of the welfare state, I would have thought, was to make life agreeable in Britain at all levels, not just at the top: to do away, that is, with the old necessity for social climbing.
What these authors fail to realise - perhaps because they have been upwardly mobile themselves - is that social ambition to get to the top is not particularly admirable or attractive. In fact it can be rather off-putting.
In any case surely one look at those who are at the top nowadays should be enough to put off others from wanting to follow suit. So loss of social mobility isn't a disaster. It's a sign the welfare state is working.
It is a sign that not everybody has to be on the make. It is a sign that not every soul is corroded with class envy and ambition. There is nothing to stop the thrusters from thrusting, but happy is the nation where joining the rat race is a not particularly admirable choice, rather than a dire necessity.
Last edited by Lucky Strike (2008-01-11 17:59:40)
To some degree brains and class have blended. In the early 1960s Ivy League schools began admitting kids because they were smart. and a lot of those kids went on to make enormous amounts of money. and now they have kids going on to prep and Ivy League schools. It usually only took a generation or two in America to inherit class. Now the process is a bit speeded up. Of course, upper class tastes have gone a bit down market. It is hard to be identified as upper class by what you wear or even how you act. It kind of boils down to what you own. otherwise there may not be much distinction from the upper class in America and the upper middle class.
My post only applies in the states. I lived in England many years ago. never did have a clue as to what was going on over there. It was all like trying to figure out cricket.
Both Worsthorne and Queenan have class(Worsthorne more so). Donald Trump is the antithesis of class. Who gets more publicity?(Rhetorical question, of course)
Thanks for the Worsthorne quotes, LS.
I think they are good stuff.