malonish wrote:Brings a tear to my eye seeing someone start out on third base and make it home to score.
Or perhaps we can congratulate someone who had advantages, but instead of squandering them and being lazy, she figured out how to make them work for her, creating a new company and a ton of new jobs. Capitalism works.
Those things aren't mutually exclusive. Y'all acting like I'm attacking you personally lol.
Facts though: systemic poverty can't be overcome by any amount of boot strap pulling and the ones who start out with fancy silverware will get fancier ones by virtue of opportunities their station provides for.
Thanks for the taxes though Bumble. Maybe Texas can use it to fix their inadequate coal, natty gas, and nuclear instruments that accounted for vast majority of the power loss this week.
Wow. Go preach your politics and ignorance somewhere else.
Everyone is just saying good for her. And bootstrapping is real but people who have been privileged enough to not experience it often don’t recognize it. America is the land of bootstrappers.
People who politicize everything are the reason for our current culture crisis. Unhappy people causing problems and offering no solutions.
Pretty cool watching a successful entrepreneur ring the bell with a baby in hand.
SMUvet wrote:Sorry gotta go work on the ΓÇ£systemΓÇ¥ to hold people down. Also have a meeting with the lizard people later.
Nice strawman though. Should spend less time on message boards and more time boning up on logic and reasoning. Toss a Scientific Method class in there. I recommend PHYS 3333 at good ol SMU.
If you don't accept the fact that there are systems in place to maintain status quo, not "The System" lmao, then you might as well believe in lizard people because you are separated from reality.
Americans benefit from overestimates of social class mobility because they bolster widely held American ideals of meritocracy and equality of opportunity (Durkheim, 1933, Fiske and Markus, 2012, Weber, 1930). Thus, overestimates of class mobility satisfy the need to believe that the societal status of the self and others is determined fairly and justly.
In Texas, about 9% of children born in the lowest income quintile reach the upper quintile. Rates are much lower throughout the Deep South and much higher in the Midwest. "The strongest predictors of upward mobility are measures of family structure, such as the fraction of single parents in the area. As with race, parents’ marital status does not matter purely through its effects at the individual level. Children of married parents also have higher rates of upward mobility if they live in communities with fewer single parents."
While I think it’s true that a good portion of what goes for progressivism is simply the politics of envy, I believe Malonish is right that there are some barriers to success.
ponyboy wrote:While I think it’s true that a good portion of what goes for progressivism is simply the politics of envy, I believe Malonish is right that there are some barriers to success.
Thanks. It can't be done without hard work but hard work isn't the only thing you need to get it done.