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Everyone has unique opportunities. We'll never have perfect equality of opportunity or social connections. Buffett and Gates weren't born into the lower strata of society, but nor were they born into the very upper elite. How many of Gates's classmates at his prep school or at Harvard did nearly as well as he? How often do children of congressmen/women become multibillionaires? We can divy up privilege endlessly (for having a lawyer dad, for having decent parents at all, for being born in the first world, for surviving infancy), but the only point of the article was to show whose wealth was inherited and whose was not.


How EVERYONE has unique opportunities?

What was the unique opportunity of that kid some streets down here that got gunned down when he was 10 years old?

What was the unique opportunity of the record amount of slaves worldwide? (by the way, did you knew the world has more "traditional" slaves now than any other time in history?)

Or... what is my unique opportunity? Being in debt? Not having a single important connection? Going to shitty university? Yes, I am intelligent, I make games, but I see lots of people with less skill than me earning millions, just because they were friends of someone somewhere or their dad was the minister of something in the government. Ultimate example: Eike Batista, that CLEARLY is incompetent, since none of the business he started on his own had profits, yet his father that was the mining minister obviously had a hand in Eike 90% accuracy in finding minerals in areas previously surveyed by the goverment during his father tenure while this information is "secret" and private companies should not know, and the government recently happily handed him billions and kicked out thousands of people from their homes so he could make his lastest failure project.


Sure, but the fact that only a tiny minority of highly privileged people have the skill and extraordinary drive to move into the stratosphere doesn't change the fact that people like Gates[1] took advantage of opportunities that don't remotely resemble the opportunities that normal people get. Their billions may be self made in the sense they were unlikely to have been achieved by anyone else in their position, but not in the sense that they were likely to have had comparable success in any position but the one they found themselves in.

[1]and perhaps others like Zuckerberg more so than Buffet, who could probably have somewhat more slowly honed his investment skills and found patrons whilst working the sort of day job people with ordinary middle class backgrounds can easily get.


I don't know, I think the point of the article was to show that the uber-wealthy of America is more of a meritocracy than most think.

While that's somewhat true, the fact remains that almost all of the people on that list might not be there if they weren't born into at least the upper middle class. They took advantage of the privileges given to them, so it's not like they don't deserve it. But there are likely those from poverty and the lower middle class who work their ass off setting up businesses in things they have access to, mainly restaurants/stores, and only ever move into the upper middle class as hard as they try and as gifted/intelligent as they may be.


It's just that some people's unique opportunity is to be sold into child slavery.




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