Deserve has nothing to do with it. Do hard-working poor people deserve to be poor? |
If they had a bunch of kids out of wedlock with no money to support them… |
| I get annoyed at Dave Ramsey and his daughter posting on social media that we all have to pull ourselves up by the bootstraps. Uh, he gave all his kids fully-funded 529s, UTMA accounts and has them all on his payroll for bogus jobs! |
Or, they are irritated (or defensive) because they are being criticized for something that they had nothing to do with. |
We've bought 3 homes in the last 7 years. Yes, I post photos on Social media because it's our new home and our friends/family like to see that--we moved cross country and it's a way to stay connected to friends in the old location. I watch the nieces/nephews/2nd cousins (or whatever my cousins kids would be called) grow up, start families, buy their first home with partners, watch friends kids post their "new home" photos and yet it's never occurred for me to even wonder---How did they buy such a nice house? Who cares? It's not my business, unless they are asking me for money to help buy the house or to help them pay the bills. Basically, when I see Social media posts, I don't automatically think "wow, how can they afford that". Because it's not really any of my business. People on my social media are my friends, family and colleagues that are friends. So I'm just happy for someone who buys a new home, boat, car, etc. |
Do as I say….. |
They have it just as tough as the person that starts at home. Just different. |
See, if you had said "No one is a senior vice president of a major corporation without working extremely hard" you would have had a point. Instead... you just clearly showed your complete lack of perspective and understanding of where you started in life. Because yes - there are absolutely people who have worked at least as hard as you have, and who are at least as smart as you are, but weren't given nearly the opportunities you've had due to institutional racism, structural dysfunction, and just pure luck of the draw of life. |
Yay! First person who actually seems to understand the rules of baseball. |
Read the rest of the post. The answer is not to get defensive and say "but I worked hard." Lots of people work hard. Just own it. "Yes, I had help from my parents, I'm very grateful." Own the fact that you didn't have anything to do with the advantages you were given. Don't try to pretend the advantages don't exist and that actually, your success is entirely predicated on how hard you worked. If you really can't stand the idea of peopel thinking that a lot of your success was due to your parents money and connections, when in fact a lot of your success is due to your parents money and connections, then give up that money and those connections instead. Then you never have to feel put upon by this accusation. Alternatively, just own up to it, don't apologize (it's just how it is, life isn't always fair) and then move on. Going through life with a chip on your shoulder over this is going to make people dislike you because no one feels sorry for someone who has had every advantage in life. It's the one advantage you don't get -- random people feeling sorry for you. Get over it. Use the money you inherited to pay for some therapy or self-care. It'll work out. |
| If you were born in the U.S., you were both on 3rd. |
I deliberately wrote the bolded part because I knew it would raise the most hackles. I did want to see how I would be judged by it. I stand by what I wrote. Advancement is a complicated thing for people who don't understand what it takes to advance. Some people like to think it's all due to cronyism. Sure, there's those. But for most employers and most circumstances it comes down to the ability to perform and deliver and to take advantages of what you have at hand along with ability to work with others and manage others. Some people are simply much better at it than others and there's only so much it can be artificially distorted in the name of achieving the ideal demographic blend. Companies are not charities or they'd all go bankrupt. Nothing that has been said in the various attempts at rebuttal convinces me of the merits of their arguments, it's more of the same woe life is unfair but still taking a selective and one-sided perspective at why life is unfair. The OP started the thread criticizing people for working hard. What does being on third base, whatever that means, have to do with it? People still work extremely hard in the upper ranks of the professions and management. Meanwhile, many people at the bottom end of society really don't work at all. At all. We currently have one of the lowest participation in the labor forces among able bodied adults in the history of the United States, which is rather telling. But we also have a society where plenty of people come from nothing and end up with success while plenty of those "born on third base" fizzle out into mediocrity because they just didn't have good work ethic or dedication. I am all for being understanding and considerate, but that is separate from OP's theme, which is that people who work hard still need to check their privilege. |
Lemme just say that a 3.7 at Yale is a joke. I didn’t work all that hard at Yale and ended up with a higher GPA. It was even easier when he was in school. |
So you can basically ensure the kids, who did not Choose this, will continue along the same path of poverty? I for one would like to help the kids and give them a path out of persistent poverty, having kids that are not planned, and give them a brighter future. |
| I mean, both things can be true… |