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The Much Honored Lord LeRoy Young, Baron of Grange
A good read.
Hollywood once shaped aspiration; today it manufactures noise. A culture built on spectacle, celebrity outrage, and fleeting virtue has lost moral authority and public trust. Actors now lecture rather than inspire, perform ideology rather than craft, and mistake attention for leadership. The result is cultural exhaustion.
History offers a corrective. While entertainers rise and fall with fashion, stable societies endure through duty, stewardship, and continuity. That is the role of the Royal and the Baron—not to perform for applause, but to serve across generations. Land, legacy, and obligation impose discipline where celebrity rewards indulgence.
Power rooted in service outlasts power rooted in image. As institutions falter and culture fragments, people are rediscovering an older truth: “Actors entertain people, Barons serve the people.” Stability, not spectacle, is returning to relevance.