Click on the link and see for yourself.Can you name any? I mean the US made billionaires hailing from such countries?
Click on the link and see for yourself.Can you name any? I mean the US made billionaires hailing from such countries?
It's good that you implicitly acknowledge that an infrastructure, both physical and societal, needs to be in place for legitimate entrepreneurship to flourish at that level. An infrastructure that needs to be paid for with taxes especially by those who flourish so handsomely from it.Little to no chance if coming from a 'shit hole' country.
Click on the link and see for yourself.
Question is how many of them would have become billionaires whether they came to the US or not.
"Tope Awotona ($1.4 billion), the founder and CEO of scheduling software company Calendly. As a 12-year-old in Lagos, Nigeria, Awotona witnessed his father get shot and killed in a carjacking. Three years later he and his family moved to Atlanta, Georgia."
Please don't tell us those guys did not have any privilege prior to their success in the US. My wife was a highly decorated manager overseeing an entire continent for the world's largest financial data company and she tried to be internally moved to the US for years. Each and every single time there was other roadblocks that immigration threw at us. And this guy just moves to the US? Give me a break. That's not how it happened. As always media glorify and only amplify success but don't tell the whole story. Highlighting how his parents suffered tragedy makes the story sound so much sweeter. He certainly could not immigrate to the US on grounds of being refuge just because his dad was murdered. So how did he get into the country? I studied at one of the US's top school in graduate school and found that companies did not really bother much to get paperwork done to hire highly qualified non-residents. Something about those stories does not add up. Most likely most of them were already highly privileged in their own countries.
Can you name any? I mean the US made billionaires hailing from such countries?
Two observations. First, you are making assumptions. And, second, you are moving your own goal posts."Tope Awotona ($1.4 billion), the founder and CEO of scheduling software company Calendly. As a 12-year-old in Lagos, Nigeria, Awotona witnessed his father get shot and killed in a carjacking. Three years later he and his family moved to Atlanta, Georgia."
Please don't tell us those guys did not have any privilege prior to their success in the US. My wife was a highly decorated manager overseeing an entire continent for the world's largest financial data company and she tried to be internally moved to the US for years. Each and every single time there was other roadblocks that immigration threw at us. And this guy just moves to the US? Give me a break. That's not how it happened. As always media glorify and only amplify success but don't tell the whole story. Highlighting how his parents suffered tragedy makes the story sound so much sweeter. He certainly could not immigrate to the US on grounds of being refuge just because his dad was murdered. So how did he get into the country? I studied at one of the US's top school in graduate school and found that companies did not really bother much to get paperwork done to hire highly qualified non-residents. Something about those stories does not add up. Most likely most of them were already highly privileged in their own countries.
How many of those eventual Billionaires were originally illegal (criminal) immigrants?

Two observations. First, you are making assumptions. And, second, you are moving your own goal posts.
Oxygen tank running on low?According to dept of labor the mean income for illegals is 5.25 per hour.
I'm no mathematician but that's about 24 million working days to become a billionaire.
Not including overtime.