Friday, August 4, 2017

The Atlantic asks: "Does Power Cause Brain Damage?"

By way of update, that new blond chickie we nicknamed Cremora hasn't shown up again and we're back to the usual rotation between Splenda and SweetNLow, every-other weekend. So I'm assuming my assumption was right, that she was just a fill-in for a lonely weekend.

For all the super-rich bad boys in this world, there's several highly-secretive international agencies that provide this kind of service for, how shall we put it, personal companionship. Prices can start at ten thousand a night and up, plus air fare and transfers - meaning limos of course. (But you didn't hear any of that from me!)

What's a mystery to us is if any of these lady friends know about each other? We all do our best to cover up tell-tale evidence - changing sheets, airing out rooms and cars to get rid of lingering perfumes, and taking left-behind lingerie straight to the laundry room. But women are so intuitive, are they not? I can't imagine they don't know about each other, or at least suspect something's rotten in Denmark, as Shakespeare might delicately suggest. But then perhaps they choose to ignore it as long as they can get close to the money themselves. (That didn't sound rude or accusative, did it?)

Anyhow, that's not why I'm writing tonight. There was an amusing article in The Atlantic in this month's issue entitled "Does Power Cause Brain Damage". I can't imagine why they came out with that when things are going so smoothly in Washington DC, right?

In any case, it describes how power and money can change and corrupt people over time. And it pretty much covers my two most serious aggravations about the rich and super rich - their arrogance and belittling sense of entitlement - both equating to a total lack of appreciation for anything done for them.

Not to defend them but by way of comprehension, these people are extended in so many ways with multiple homes around the world, with their luxury cars, jets, super yachts, helicopters, haute couture and endless high society obligations, perhaps there's not time to be kind to everyone involved. I get it.

On the other hand, to carry on this kind of lifestyle requires an absolute army of support personnel - personal assistants, personal secretaries, party planners, security companies, body guards, groundskeepers, and house staff - which includes an innocent butler such as moi.

The thing is, these are all legitimate jobs to help them run their crazy lives. They couldn't do it without us, could they? So why then be arrogant? Why then feel so entitled? Specifically, in this house where I work we question why our employer can't pick up his own socks and shoes off the floor, replace batteries in his bedside remote, or even change a roll of toilet paper. Like he's entirely helpless. Those tasks are left up to all the "little people" as the Queen-of-Mean Leona Helmsley might have said.

Somewhere along the path too many rich people seem to lose their humanity. It's like they begin to think of themselves as little gods on the earth, which opens up a whole conversation about the God Complex - where I'm not going tonight and likely never will.

But what they conveniently seem to forget is that it's not about worshiping them or kissing their butts - it's all about the fat paychecks. Otherwise, they can change their own sheets, scrub their own toilets, and kiss their own butts. (Did I say that out loud?)

Here's a link to The Atlantic article. It's an easy and fun read, and sheds some light on how the rich lose their humanity and this great divide between the haves and have-nots.

Thanks for dropping in this evening,

Andrew

6 comments:

  1. Very interesting post. I think it would be worth compiling a more comprehensive list of the things a billionaire 'off-loads' that most people would never think of. It might be a good predictor of the next wave of automation.

    I don't really see this as a bad thing, at least inherently. Just like I don't see how people have come to rely on technology, whether it's fundamental things like electricity, or newer things like google. We all let the 'little people' help us in innumerable ways everyday. If anything, the super rich are just ahead of the game. More and more, the little people are actually little AIs. If anything, this is an area where the gap between the middle and upper classes may be closing.

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  2. You could be right about that Ben, and thanks for your comment. I'm not sure the Waste Management guys who pick up the garbage here twice a week feel like they're closing the gap.

    But on the other hand they do have Union pay, holidays and paid vacations, full health care, and Worker's Comp. I get your drift.
    Andrew

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  3. Andrew, I'm surprised they don't have someone to Literally wipe their backside when they're in the water closet. I suppose that they have so many obligations that they don't feel bad or even think twice ( twice is being Very generous mind you) about leaving stuff lying about. Chris

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    1. The good news Chris is that not all rich people are not inconsiderate to others. It's just that some let their money go to their heads and think of it as power.

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    2. 3 years late to the game, but who’s counting. Money is POWER. There’s power in being totally free like think they are. Problem is they aren’t totally free. If I’ve learned nothing else from your blog and book....it’s that they’re subject to some of the same problems that most of us are....such as family and the opinions of their social circle.

      But hey....they do sleep on $5000 sheets....so there’s that.

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    3. You're so kind to let me know you've been following the blog and reading the book! I do enjoy writing and sharing this mind boggling world I find myself in, and it's a real thrill when someone gets it.
      All the best,
      Andrew

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