why are the rich sons and daughters pitied
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And things always have to be found for them to do.” Christopher Hitchens’s mildest line about the royals was somehow the most lancing. In their quest to be of some use, there is an air of minor-Windsor about the First Daughter and the First Son-in-Law of the United States. Ivanka Trump was a less than essential presence at last week’s G20 summit. Jared Kushner held a Middle East peace forum that will not displace the Camp David Accords in the lore of the region. That modern pillory, social media, made sport of #UnwantedIvanka, inserting her, Forrest Gumpishly, into momentous events. Ivanka storming Juno beach. Ivanka as Renaissance muse. Ivanka on the moon.
It has been a trying year for the sons and daughters of privilege, or at any rate the less gifted among them. Parents with razors for elbows were caught bribing universities to admit their children. The idea that a youngish republic cannot have a class system took a pounding — as did that system’s rich-kid beneficiaries.
Once, I would have been at the head of the mob, evil-eyed and foaming. But I have come to know enough of these scions to understand the sadness of their lot. Here are three reasons to pity the privileged.
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