mpruet
Well-known member
It sounds like you missed out on the rule - you only have to get rich once. If you had a share of successes, then that would have been time to protect what you had attained.mpruet, You are obviously one of those for whom "things" worked out. That's great - for you. But please do not keep referencing your situation as if that were the norm. I have also had my share of successes - as well as my share of failures. Through it all I was able to understand that for many of us "but there for the luck of..." it could have been very different.
And of the folks not improving their lot, how many are not putting what assets they have to work to create additional income streams?As far as HC's comment, that there may be more millionaires speaks to the fact that a million is no longer as much as it once was and ignores the fact that those are the bottom of the economic ladder are doing worse. This is income inequality and IS growing. Also according to Pew, income inequality in the U.S. is found to have increased by about 20% from 1980 to 2016.
I firmly believe that there are two large classes of folks in this world: 1) those who strongly believe that they are responsible for themselves and 2) those who believe that they are not. The first group will do whatever they can to improve their position while the second will just sit and blame someone else. Those in the first group will learn new skills, study new things, think about the implications of events, see trends, learn from mentors, and position themselves for success. The second group will not and then blame someone else because the stuff they are doing is no longer considered valuable.
Did you ever wonder what the poor buggy manufactures did when the auto became more common than the horse and buggy? Do you not see that the coal industry isn’t going to come back? Things change and those who resist that change will probably lose out. Sears is a recent example. Eastman Kodak is another. And Xerox is barely a fraction of its former self. And yet all of these companies had the opportunity to become much greater than they were in their prime. They all refused too grow when the environment changed.