New York Post

Elites live in different USA

Out of touch to a dangerous degree

- Isaac Schorr is a staff writer at Mediaite.

THE United States has a wealthy, partisan elite class that’s not only immune from and numb to the problems of their countrymen, but enormously confident in and willing to impose unpopular policies on them. This is a recipe for disaster. The problem is starkly illustrate­d in a new survey Scott Rasmussen conducted on behalf of the Committee to Unleash Prosperity, which divided respondent­s between elites (people with at least one postgradua­te degree, earning more than $150,000, living in ZIP codes where the population density exceeds 10,000 per square mile) and the general public.

Rasmussen also recorded the responses of a subset of elites — “super elites,” if you will — who graduated from a few prestigiou­s private universiti­es, including members of the Ivy League, Duke, Stanford and Northweste­rn.

Rich getting richer

It’s near impossible to behold the results and not acknowledg­e they’re indicative of a fundamenta­l disconnect between two Americas.

That disconnect should be of as much concern to proud aristocrat­s as it is to the peasantry.

It should come as no surprise that between America and its upper crust, a much higher proportion of the latter (73%) consider themselves Democrats and approve of Joe Biden’s performanc­e as president (84%).

But there are less surface-level — and more telling — findings.

The rich are indeed getting richer, say the rich.

Seventy-four percent of the elites and 88% of super elites report their personal finances are on the upswing.

And the bulk of those who remain say they’re either unsure or they’re getting neither better nor worse.

A negligible proportion of respondent­s said their pocketbook­s are getting lighter.

Compare that to Americans more generally, and it’s hard to believe the two groups are living in the same country.

While 40% of Americans say their financial situation is worsening, just 20% say it’s improving.

This might seem intuitive; it stands to reason that those who are making more money would be more inclined to think well of their financial standing.

But it is still striking that the class disproport­ionately represente­d in positions of influence does not feel the same, very real economic pains the rest of America does.

Why? Because that makes them less likely to take steps to alleviate that pain and even more likely to worsen it in pursuit of their ideologica­l objectives.

This truth was borne out by the three groups’ answers to other questions.

Arrogance

A stunning 77% of elites and 89% of super elites support the “strict rationing of meat, gas, and electricit­y.”

Some 72% of elites and 81% of super elites would ban the use of gas-powered cars.

Fifty-five percent of elites and 70% of super elites would prevent Americans from engaging in “nonessenti­al” air travel.

Oh, and 47% of elites and 55% of super elites believe the government affords Americans “too much freedom.”

Predictabl­y, the rest of the country would be appalled to hear what this group would do with absolute power; the percentage that would agree to any of those measures lies between 16% and 25%.

What’s perhaps most troubling of all, however, is elites’ staggering surplus of self-confidence in government, a halfway decent proxy for themselves.

Seventy percent of elites (double the number of average Americans) and 89% of super elites said they trust the government to do the right thing.

“Out of touch” barely describes this attitude.

Arrogant is more accurate. If America is to avoid a tailspin into this toxic feedback loop, its elites will need to step outside their bubble, stop conforming in an effort to blend in with their myopic peers and start addressing the legitimate grievances of their fellow Americans.

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 ?? ?? 2 WORLDS: John Kerry mingles with the Davos in-crowd as a poll finds most elites, but only 20% of average Americans, feel they’re succeeding financiall­y.
2 WORLDS: John Kerry mingles with the Davos in-crowd as a poll finds most elites, but only 20% of average Americans, feel they’re succeeding financiall­y.

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