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> "this endless need to prostrate yourself and attribute everything to luck is silly and harmful"

...you're saying it in your post that everyone is saying it.




True, people are saying it’s nothing but luck, which was my point. It is discouraging and unhelpful to relentlessly best people over the head with nonsense like that, which happens in every post like this.


Is it nonsense when it is backed by studies linked above, experiences shared by others here, and those of our own?

I’ve made plenty of money advising startup entrepreneurs on IP law, incorporation, and tax strategy. That means I have visibility into founders’ most sensitive personal financial information and I can count on my hands how many founders I’ve met who don’t come from financially well-off backgrounds.

That may be a function of the fact that my services are expensive and only those who are well-resourced would seek me out… but truth be told if they can’t afford me they probably couldn’t afford to take the kinds of risks necessary for the success defined in this article.

I say this as someone who was “born lucky” too. If my parents weren’t both professionals with money to invest in my education and a network for me to tap when I started my firm, all the hard work in the world couldn’t guarantee I’d be where I am. And I don’t even consider myself that successful compared to others I know.




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