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paulryanrogers 3 hours ago

> Generational wealth is not required.

Freedom from generational poverty is required. A lot of PoC in the US grow up in dire straights which weighs on their mental health. Their chance at a university education drops rapidly when they have a network that depends upon them working from adolescence onward.

My grandfather worked selling cookies for decades and retired with a pension. My father worked as a professional engineer and midlevel manager at least as long and had less to show for it. I'm trying to work my way into upper management and will likely retire later and with less than either of them.

People feel the walls closing in on them. Telling them to buy more lottery tickets, albeit in the form of founding companies, isn't an answer that scales.

WalterBright 2 hours ago | parent [-]

> Freedom from generational poverty is required.

This is simply false. Oprah grew up on welfare and is a multi-billionaire.

> Telling them to buy more lottery tickets

The math on lottery tickets is negative. The math on stocks is positive.

The book "The Millionaire Next Door" is a recipe for ordinary people becoming wealthy. You can't afford not to read it.

jmyeet an hour ago | parent [-]

People really do get all up in their feelings on this issue and end up making emotional arguments based on anecdotes. Oprah Winfrey is an anecdote. Somebody's grandfather starting a business in an 8x8 shack is an anecdote.

What isn't an anecdote is slavery, the politcal and economic disenfranchisement of the Reconstruction Era, segregation, redlining, HOAs (which were started to keep black people out [1]), access to free college education (with the GI Bill), access to cheap mortgages to create generational wealth through property, the resulting decay in infrastructure and education thanks to the resultant "White Flight", over-policing and disproportionate outcomes in the criminal justice system.

There are over 1000 billionaires in the US now, most of them homegrown most likely. There are about 14 black billionaires (27 globally, apparently). This includes Oprah, Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods and LeBron James. 15% of the US population is black.

The "just invest in stocks" pseudo-advice is this generation's "let them eat cake" A large percentage of the US population do not have disposable income. They are often working several jobs just to live. The "Millionaire Next Door" is more often than not just some guy who bought a house in the 1980s and sat on it.

[1]: https://www.homesweetheadache.com/post/the-true-origins-of-h...