First, understand why people are poor

1. No marketable skills. Busy with infighting, comparison, instant gratification, aimless wandering, selling labor, and low-level competition, there is no time to hone skills and become irreplaceable in any field.

2. Lack of viable methodologies. Limited exposure, not knowing what is best and worst about a situation, with no guidance, they can only explore blindly, wasting a lot of time pioneering in fields that could be directly inherited.

3. Poor tolerance for failure. Financially unsupported to try many times, many "successful people" can fail eighty or ninety times before succeeding, while they only get one or two attempts (or none), resulting in a very low probability of success.

4. Poor mental resilience. Due to the more severe phenomenon of mutual harm among the poor, growing up in an environment of devaluation, oppression, scarcity, and plunder makes it easier for individuals to feel inferior, give up, not try or challenge, and not take responsibility, naturally resulting in fewer opportunities to accumulate wealth.

5. Harder to receive help from benefactors. Those in a mire environment habitually violate each other's boundaries, put others down to elevate themselves, take small advantages, pursue short-term benefits, and avoid responsibility; in mature social settings, these "bad habits" are easily recognized and then excluded.

6. Lack of long-term strategic thinking. Often facing short-term survival pressures, the poor have more scarce time and resources, making it difficult to attend to longer-term, healthier, and sustainable areas. Even if they suddenly become wealthy, they are more easily overwhelmed due to a lack of long-term thinking habits.

7. Lack of information, more easily exploited by rules. Unfamiliar with various rules, filtering logic, etiquette, networking, jargon, and ecological relationships, they are at a disadvantage in familiarity with the rules.