Poor kids inherit stuff.
Middle-class kids inherit debt.
Rich kids inherit systems.
That’s the hierarchy nobody talks about.
Poor families pass down memories.
Furniture. Jewelry. Sentiment.
Middle-class families pass down obligations.
Mortgages. Education loans. Tax problems.
Rich families pass down infrastructure.
Trusts. LLCs. Operating businesses. Rules.
The middle class believes inheritance is money.
The wealthy know money is temporary.
Cash gets spent.
Systems keep producing.
A trust isn’t about wealth.
It’s about control after death.
An LLC isn’t just a company.
It’s a legal shield.
A tax strategy.
A container that survives generations.
Schools teach children how to earn.
Wealthy families teach children how to own.
That’s why rich kids don’t panic during recessions.
They don’t depend on salaries.
They inherit machines that produce cash flow.
Middle-class kids inherit responsibility without leverage.
Assets that come with liabilities.
Bills disguised as wealth.
Debt isn’t bad luck.
It’s the residue of income thinking.
If your parents worked their whole lives and left behind payments instead of systems, that wasn’t failure.
It was conditioning.
Jobs end when you do.
Systems don’t.
That’s the real inheritance gap.
And once you see it, you can’t unsee it.
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