Noticed something interesting about how today's highest-earning millennials climb the ladder—they're basically following the same playbook.
Here's the pattern: elite university degree, then migration to one of a handful of superstar cities, followed by entry into a narrow band of truly lucrative industries. That's it. The routes diverge way less than you'd expect.
It's not that these paths are the only way up, but if you map out where the wealth is concentrating, you see this repeating template everywhere. Geography matters. Education pedigree matters. Industry selection matters—a lot.
Makes you think about opportunity distribution and whether the ladder's actually getting wider or just more specialized.
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0xSoulless
· 2h ago
What sounds good is called "professionalization," but what sounds bad is just class solidification. Elite universities, super cities, highly profitable industries... this script has long been locked in by big capital, and retail investors have no other options. Instead of widening the ladder, it's become even narrower.
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ser_we_are_ngmi
· 8h ago
Basically, it's about class solidification, really. Elite universities + first-tier cities + a few key industries—this combination guarantees victory, and others don't even have the right to compete...
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rug_connoisseur
· 01-10 19:40
NGL, to put it simply, the wealthy circles are becoming more and more competitive, and the class stratification is becoming rigid.
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PretendingToReadDocs
· 01-10 19:33
Basically, it's just the solidification of social classes. The pattern of elite universities → first-tier cities → fintech repeats a thousand times... It seems like there are many opportunities, but in reality, the barriers are getting higher and higher.
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MoneyBurnerSociety
· 01-10 19:18
Basically, it's become formulaic, just like our futures trading—entry position, leverage multiple, stop-loss level, same template kills off a bunch of people. Elite universities, first-tier cities, fintech—change the name and it's still copy-paste.
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AlgoAlchemist
· 01-10 19:18
NGL, I've seen through this routine long ago. Top universities + first-tier cities + fintech—these three tricks can make money... What about other industries? Is there really no way out?
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DoomCanister
· 01-10 19:12
Rolled to the bottom, everyone has to go to top-tier companies.
Noticed something interesting about how today's highest-earning millennials climb the ladder—they're basically following the same playbook.
Here's the pattern: elite university degree, then migration to one of a handful of superstar cities, followed by entry into a narrow band of truly lucrative industries. That's it. The routes diverge way less than you'd expect.
It's not that these paths are the only way up, but if you map out where the wealth is concentrating, you see this repeating template everywhere. Geography matters. Education pedigree matters. Industry selection matters—a lot.
Makes you think about opportunity distribution and whether the ladder's actually getting wider or just more specialized.