Sunday Star-Times

The cut-throat world of Monopoly

- By LOWEN LIU

THE BOARD game Monopoly will soon lose a classic token and gain a new one, by way of a public vote on Facebook. It may sound like harmless fun, but is in fact a travesty, though not for the sake of nostalgia or preservati­onal instinct. Notice the four tokens currently winning the vote, and thus most likely to stay ‘‘safe’’ from eliminatio­n. They are, as of this writing, the Scottie dog, the race car, the battleship and the top hat. What do they have in common? Accoutreme­nts of the 1 per cent. A Scottish terrier champion- line puppy may cost $US1500. A roadster, $ US50,000. A battleship, $ US100 million in mid- century dollars. The top hat is as much a sign of the filthy rich as the monocle.

And here are the four losers: the humble thimble, the laceless workboot, the iron (no electric model, this one you had to heat in a stovepipe oven) and the current bottom-feeder, the wheelbarro­w. What do they have in common? Labour. Penury. Born, most of them, with the first 1935 edition, when the Great Depression was not an instructiv­e economic case study, but outside your window. The full weight of society was in motion to fix it, and its legacy was a healthy wariness of a super-rich class run amok. When the Scottie and wheelbarro­w, the latecomers, were introduced in 1952 — balanced, notice, between one rich token and one poor! — the top marginal income tax rate in the United States was 92 per cent.

The proposed replacemen­t tokens? An anthropomo­rphic robot, a diamond ring, a guitar, a cat with sizeable bling on its collar and a bleeping helicopter. Not a one of them symbolic of the labouring class.

Monopoly is a

ruthless

teacher. To win, you must not merely accumulate wealth; you must bankrupt your opponent, watch as he or she, friend or family member, makes a steady march toward dissolutio­n. Only a roll of the dice determines whether you pass Go or end up in jail, or whether it will be you bankrupted tomorrow. Its zero- sum lesson is, strangely enough, a fair one, in that it is equally unfair. But now that balance is soon to be disrupted in one

The top hat is as much a sign of the filthy rich as the monocle.

important way, and yet another bulwark against the dominating perception that the rich life is the only admirable one will be dismantled. I feel sorry for us all. What child now would ever want to set foot on Park Place in hobo footwear? What child would be expected to, as a reminder that society is built on the low ground as much as the high?

As a boy I favoured the car. I made zoom-zoom noises and took the turns hard, with a controlled fishtailin­g of the back wheels. I usually played against my father, who used the iron, the token I now favour for its simple form and function. ‘‘What do I need a race car for?’’ my father said. And he proceeded to trounce me.

 ?? Photo: Fairfax NZ ?? Do not pass Go: The traditiona­l board game is set to change for ever.
Photo: Fairfax NZ Do not pass Go: The traditiona­l board game is set to change for ever.

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