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Slum Lords
John Updike
The superrich make lousy neighbors- they buy a house and tear it down and build another, twice as big, and leave. They're never there; they own so many other houses, each demands a visit. Entire neighborhoods called fashionable, bustling with servants and masters, such as Louisburg Square in Boston or Bel Air in L.A., are districts now like Wall Street after dark or Tombstone onc e the silver boom went bust. The essence of superrich is absence. They like to demonstrate they can afford to be elsewhere. Don't let them in. Their riches form a kind of poverty.

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