Keep in mind that the main reason for today's seniors to continue working after age 65 is because the ladder was already being pulled up when their fathers and grandfathers were in their teens & 20's, by the same forces that are still acting today.
If you do the math you would have to figure that the majority of people working to reduce opportunities for today's young people, are not senior citizens but mainly just a different class of younger people closer in age to their 20's than their 60's.
>Really, any sufficiently simple path to wealth that doesn't involve the capital class gets patched out by the system relatively quickly
So true, but sometimes quicker than others.
It's more like a zero-sum outcome for seekers of a simple path to riches before a certain age, of which there is never going to be enough opportunity to satisfy.
You can't buy yourself out of a financial system by working for money.
You don't stand a chance unless you work for something else more worthwhile.
Keep in mind that the main reason for today's seniors to continue working after age 65 is because the ladder was already being pulled up when their fathers and grandfathers were in their teens & 20's, by the same forces that are still acting today.
If you do the math you would have to figure that the majority of people working to reduce opportunities for today's young people, are not senior citizens but mainly just a different class of younger people closer in age to their 20's than their 60's.
>Really, any sufficiently simple path to wealth that doesn't involve the capital class gets patched out by the system relatively quickly
So true, but sometimes quicker than others.
It's more like a zero-sum outcome for seekers of a simple path to riches before a certain age, of which there is never going to be enough opportunity to satisfy.
You can't buy yourself out of a financial system by working for money.
You don't stand a chance unless you work for something else more worthwhile.
And why would you want to retire from that?