Posted on May 17, 2015
By
Chris Hedges
Portraits of former Presidents George W. Bush, left, and George
H.W. Bush, his father, part of the show “The Art of Leadership: A
President’s Diplomacy.” The exhibit of portraits of world leaders by the
younger Bush are on display at the George W. Bush Presidential Library
and Museum in Dallas and runs through June 3. (AP / Benny Snyder)
The pathology of the rich white family is the most dangerous
pathology in America. The rich white family is cursed with too much
money and privilege. It is devoid of empathy, the result of lifetimes of
entitlement. It has little sense of loyalty and lacks the capacity for
self-sacrifice. Its definition of friendship is reduced to “What can you
do for me?” It is possessed by an insatiable lust to increase its
fortunes and power. It believes that wealth and privilege confer to it a
superior intelligence and virtue. It is infused with an unchecked
hedonism and narcissism. And because of all this, it interprets reality
through a lens of self-adulation and greed that renders it delusional.
The rich white family is a menace. The pathologies of the poor, when set
against the pathologies of rich white people, are like a candle set
beside the sun.
There are no shortages of acolytes and propagandists for rich white
families. They dominate our airwaves. They blame poverty, societal
breakdown, urban violence, drug use, domestic abuse and crime on the
pathology of poor black families—not that they know any. They argue that
poor black families disintegrate because of some inherent defect—here
you can read between the lines that white people are better than black
people—a defect that these poor families need to fix.