Read my post again, carefully. Specifically the part of, as you put it, former politicians, and my part of former positions not disqualifying you from future employment. You read what you wanted to read.
Sorry, I have to laugh.
Bill Gates = His family was upper middle class; his father was a prominent lawyer, his mother served on the board of directors for First Interstate BancSystem and the United Way, and her father, J. W. Maxwell, was a national bank president.
Warren Buffet was born in 1930. The cost of, for example, the Wharton School (possibly the best business and management college in the country) was as much as part time manual labor cost in 1930. You should look into plots showing the increase of college tuition vs the increase in the average unskilled worker salary throughout the years.
I'll give you one simple example. In 1976, NJIT in Newark NJ cost ~$20/credit. A part time car washer in Newark NJ, back in 1976, could earn a minimum wage of $2.30 a week without a problem. By comparison, the cost of a credit hour now, 2009, is $400. A part time car washer at the same location today can earn a minimum wage of $7.15. If you don't see the disparity between being able to pay for a college credit working 10 hours, and being able to pay for one working 56 hours, what exactly do you base your assertions on?
A gallon of regular gas cost 59c in 1976, less than 1/4 of an hour wage. A gallon just a few months ago rose as high as 4.50 here, more than 1/2 an hour wage. The story is the same with a gallon of milk, a carton of eggs, a loaf of bread.
Do you honestly not see the disparity between those born into money and those not? Do you not see the disparity between the value and opportunities presented with the lowest of wages in the first 80 years of the 1900s and just the last 20 years? In his autobiography, Buffet readily admits that his ability to make money coincided directly with the opportunities presented at the times. Do you honestly think we can, today, see sequels to the stories of the captains of industries?
I won't knock the examples of Oprah and Will, simply because they did come from poor upbringings and worked hard to achieve their celebrity and wealth. HOWEVER, again we encounter the example of the opportunities presented by their times. Oprah found success through hard work and earning a scholarship to a historically black university, Will Smith through breaking out in the newly forming rap music world without stepping foot in a college. Considering, again, the disparity between the acceptance levels at colleges of lower class minorities in the 60s-70s to that of today, you'll also see that the competitive level of the entering classes is highly in favor of those with familial money. And of course, if you want every urban black youth to take Will Smith as their role model for success, you really don't want them to look at education as a lucrative option, do ya?
Steve Jobs basically stole the profits from his partner for an initial gig with Atari, which gave him the money to engage in business negotiations with a multimillionare to found Apple Computer. He didn't do it with his own money, and his own books show he didn't work hard. His partner from the Atari deal did all of the work that netted them the profit, and he stole almost all of it! So, you want people to live by his example of lying to their business partners and stealing profits? Oh, and how he credited his LSD usage with some of his greatest periods of growth? SERIOUSLY?
TRUMP? You do realize he's the son of one of the most powerful real estate developers of New York's history? I'm not even gonna go into Trump...
I love it when people use history's examples of success as a benchmark that today's upcoming generations can look to for inspiration and guidance. Apparently some people believe that times changes in all things, except for opportunities for success. Those somehow stay the same.
Oh, and as for my examples about 1976 to 2009. That's the comparison between the woman's father and myself. Whenever we discuss the topic, he always says "I don't know how you did all this by yourself." Sometimes, neither do I.