Anonymous wrote:So he's basically a bored trust fund baby amusing himself with immature antics.
Anonymous wrote:He’s hot.
Anonymous wrote:Drugs, mental health issues and a safety net so doesn’t have to work hard in life. It’s sad to see.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He reminds me so much of JFK Jr. Anyway he is a Harvard Law grad and this is how he spends his time. Rich people are just drains on society.
He’s got JFK jr’s head of hair, but definitely his own father’s face.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He reminds me so much of JFK Jr. Anyway he is a Harvard Law grad and this is how he spends his time. Rich people are just drains on society.
He’s got JFK jr’s head of hair, but definitely his own father’s face.
Anonymous wrote:Y’all are late to the game with Jack. His videos in 2020 were way more “unhinged.”
He’s a rich kid living a rich kid life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rich American families seem to follow a pretty predictable pattern:
First generation is scrappy, driven, smart, sometimes dishonest, often immigrant, buys a place in American high society but never fully accepted
Second generation goes to all the right schools, much more accepted in society and polished, solidifies family business and standing
Third generation goes to all the right schools, maybe nominally runs family business but spends most of time on charity or artistic type stuff or things like dressage. Less concerned about their kids “making it” or proving the family name
Fourth generation goes to the fancy private k-12 but maybe not fancy college, never has a real job, pisses away family legacy or is full on wacky. (Most extreme example is DuPont).
There’s some wiggle around the edges and some families skip a step but that seems like a pretty common pattern. It’s like capitalism has a built in brake on building an aristocracy.
Go on about the DuPonts. Spill the tea
Anonymous wrote:He reminds me so much of JFK Jr. Anyway he is a Harvard Law grad and this is how he spends his time. Rich people are just drains on society.
Anonymous wrote:So he's basically a bored trust fund baby amusing himself with immature antics.
Anonymous wrote:Rich American families seem to follow a pretty predictable pattern:
First generation is scrappy, driven, smart, sometimes dishonest, often immigrant, buys a place in American high society but never fully accepted
Second generation goes to all the right schools, much more accepted in society and polished, solidifies family business and standing
Third generation goes to all the right schools, maybe nominally runs family business but spends most of time on charity or artistic type stuff or things like dressage. Less concerned about their kids “making it” or proving the family name
Fourth generation goes to the fancy private k-12 but maybe not fancy college, never has a real job, pisses away family legacy or is full on wacky. (Most extreme example is DuPont).
There’s some wiggle around the edges and some families skip a step but that seems like a pretty common pattern. It’s like capitalism has a built in brake on building an aristocracy.
Anonymous wrote:Rich American families seem to follow a pretty predictable pattern:
First generation is scrappy, driven, smart, sometimes dishonest, often immigrant, buys a place in American high society but never fully accepted
Second generation goes to all the right schools, much more accepted in society and polished, solidifies family business and standing
Third generation goes to all the right schools, maybe nominally runs family business but spends most of time on charity or artistic type stuff or things like dressage. Less concerned about their kids “making it” or proving the family name
Fourth generation goes to the fancy private k-12 but maybe not fancy college, never has a real job, pisses away family legacy or is full on wacky. (Most extreme example is DuPont).
There’s some wiggle around the edges and some families skip a step but that seems like a pretty common pattern. It’s like capitalism has a built in brake on building an aristocracy.