mvscal wrote:Actually the vast majority of them were "peasants" or the descendents of "peasants".
This is something you would understand if you actually had a clue of what the fuck you're talking about instead of spewing all of your wildly distorted commie handwringing bullshit.
Oh this is going to be fun.
Jay Gould- Gould, the son of John Burr Gould (1792-1866) and Mary Moore (c1800-1841), was born on a farm near Roxbury, New York. He studied at the Hobart Academy, but left at age 16, to work for his father in the hardware business.
John D. Rockefeller: born in Richford, New York, the second of the six children to William Avery Rockefeller (November 13, 1810 - May 11, 1906) and Eliza Davison (September 12, 1813 - March 28, 1889). William was a traveling salesmen of dubious products, such as "cancer cures," a philanderer and bigamist.
And even that paragon of Horatio Alger "rags to riches" Andrew Carnegie was not a peasant.
Andrew Carnegie was born in Dunfermline, Scotland, on November 25, 1835. The son of a weaver, he came with his family to the United States in 1848 and settled in Allegheny, Pennsylvania.
All the sons of businessmen or tradesmen, NOT PEASANTS.
"Once upon a time, dinosaurs didn't have families. They lived in the woods and ate their children. It was a golden age."
—Earl Sinclair
"I do have respect for authority even though I throw jelly dicks at them.
- Antonio Brown