The Buying of Privilege

I keep telling you: it's always about money. Especially in the U.S, where money is, as an author put it a long time ago, the "civil religion." It seems that there is a practice among the wealthy to skip standing in line at Disney World by hiring disabled people to pretend that they are part of the family, so that the rich kid and his parents get preferential treatment. This pretense is handsomely rewarded, at about a thousand dollars a day, which has prompted some people to justify the practice, by pointing out that this is a way of helping the disabled.

Though that may be the case, you and I know that the well-to-do don't do it for that reason. As usual, they are buying their way around rules or conditions that others have to abide by. Money buys privilege.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Belgian Buggery

Hear, Hear!

Chinese Capitalism