Home / Columns / Dare to ask: Why are the wealthy so rude?

Dare to ask: Why are the wealthy so rude?

By Phillip Milano

Question

I always figured the higher someone’s education and the more money, the better their manners. So why do so many people with money and education seem to be the rudest?

G. Havill, 19, female, Mount Vernon, Iowa

Replies

Sometimes people with a lot of money or with a lot of education seem to think they are “better” than others. But “more” does not always make something “better.”

S. Rollison, 49, female, New Alexandria, Pa.

It’s a matter of training, not money, and an increasing number of people who have the latter disdain the former as “beneath them.” “Upper class” and “classy” are pretty much a contradiction in terms.

Ann, 40, Kansas City, Mo.

It may have to do with centuries of cocky, mean upper-class gentry types from past civilizations. . . . The other theory is that poor people are more generous because they know what it’s like to be poor.

Stephanie, Washington, D.C.

Expert says

We thought we’d get at least a few “they’re just like the rest of us, no better and no worse”-type responses. Where’s the love? We know there’s been no redistribution yet, but c’mon.

We found a whiz who studied the wealthy, and yep, he found that they’re just like the rest of us, no better and no worse.

Most people think rich folks inherited their money or got it by an unfair advantage, but that’s usually not the case, said Doug Harrison, co-author of The New Elite: Inside the Minds of the Truly Wealthy.

For example, about 90 percent of the wealth earned in the United States in the past decade was by entrepreneurs from the middle class who worked their way up the hard way, he said.

“People who created wealth usually have good values,” said Harrison, who with his co-authors talked to about 4,000 people across the top 10 percent of the U.S. economy, “with a serious focus on people with $5 million or greater in liquidity.”

“You don’t become successful by being a [jerk], you do it by being good to people who work for you and to your customers and your bankers.”

The problem is, many of us don’t know it when we encounter rich types, most of whom are “regular people,” so we don’t “see” behavior that counters media stereotypes of “stupid, flippant” richies such as Paris Hilton or Britney Spears, he said.

Plus, maybe poorer people’s nastiness gets a free pass because they don’t have an advantage over you.

“If you run into rude rich people, you might be like ‘God they are an – -. If I was in that position I wouldn’t be that way,’ but if it’s a rude redneck, you might think ‘Well of course they’re going to be that way, and I don’t care because I’m better than them.’ ”

Not all upper-crusts are perfect, though.

“Some have people around them who allow them to be very efficient, so they get used to it,” Harrison said. “They start expecting it, so if someone fails to perform, it can tick them off.”

Check Also

Dare to Ask: Are slippers and bare feet in public race-specific?

By Phillip J. Milano Question Why do I constantly see black people shopping in stores ...

Leave a Reply