The Weekend’s Gun Tragedies Show Why You Must Buy (Even More) Guns
The Australian Police Reportedly 'Froze' During Bondi Terror Attack
The LAPD Presser on the Deaths of Rob Reiner and Wife Michele Singer...
Why Obama's People Want You to Call His 'Library' a 'Center' Instead
Tone Deaf: Did Chuck Schumer Really Say This on Sunday?
Liberal Lowlife: Mark Kelly
Shocker: 'Trans-Inclusive' Locker Room Policies Enabled Predators
Three Illegal Immigrants Arrested for Rash of Home Break-Ins in Wisconsin
Amanda Seyfried Thinks Socialism - a Grotesque Ideology - Is a Gorgeous Idea
The Anti-Zionist Movement Hits Home
The Stagnant Quo
There’s Nothing Magic About America’s Dirt
America's 21st Century National Security Strategy
Miracles and Heroes in Many Shapes This Chanukah
DOJ’s Opioid War Hurts Ordinary Americans in Pain
Tipsheet

Common Is As Common Does

There is a big discussion going on in Britain based on the fact that Kate Middleton, Prince William's fiancee, is a "commoner," i.e., not born of royal blood.

Interestingly, Prince William has opined, as the linked story notes, that he likes America because here, snobbery is more about money than about bloodlines.  
Advertisement

But I don't think he's got it quite right.  What I like about America is that here, one is defined by what one does, rather than by who one is.  "Common" is as "common" does; a man identifies himself as a gentleman and a woman as a lady -- in the best sense of the terms -- by how they behave, not to whom they were born.

Americans admire "money" less than they do the qualities that are often (though not always) associated with amassing it, i.e., diligence, enterprise, intelligence, self-denial, thrift.  If ours were simply a money-worshipping society, then the scions of "old money" (who had inherited, rather than earned it) would command much more attention than they do.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement