Quote from TrueProp: Even though I can understand where you are trying to go with your post and I agree with your underlying reasoning (I don't feel it was articulated very well at all), I disagree wholeheartedly with your blanket generalizations of the reasoning abilities of the different economic classes. I find what you said very condescending and closed-minded -- especially for a pizza delivery man or a caddy. The idea that any type of class of people all act the same way is just flat out incredibly, emphatically wrong! Judging from your present career situation, I'm guessing that you didn't come from one of the best economic upbringings as a child. It seems like you should understand that the socio-economic factors that cause people to be in dire financial circumstances are, in many cases, beyond their control. Some of these school kids cannot even take their school books home because the school won't allow them to do it! I've watched parents check their kids math homework (they're making an effort to help at least) and they have no idea what they're doing! I'm not letting people off of the hook here and saying that people aren't responsible for their results, but a little understanding goes a long way. I've had to accept this, especially after mentoring a few young children from "the ghetto", as you call it. I'm an Ralph Waldo Emerson, self-reliant, bootstrapper, that believes if you commit yourself to something you can do anything. At the same time, I realize that I was brought up by parents that hammered that home to me my entire life and that made it a second nature of thinking for me. My parents are from that "ghetto" that you speak of. They made great successes of themselves. They are the outlier. They had parents that worked hard everyday and hammered that home to them and they passed it on to me -- again, they are the outlier. Many of these people were raised in situations where they don't have two parents that try to engender the principles of hard work, goal-setting and the importance of education. Many times they don't have two parents at all, and the one they do have doesn't set a very good example anyway! All I'm saying is that during my life I've had to deal with obstacles. We all have had obstacles in life -- especially in becoming a profitable trader (7 months of obstacles for me)! But the obstacles I had as a kid pale...PALE in comparison to what some of the people in lower income brackets were forced to face, and in some cases overcome. Be grateful that you are blessed with the opportunity to see both sides of the tracks and that you can learn from each of them accordingly.