Here is my answer, too long for Twitter’s format:

When I graduated from high school, the school I graduated from was one of two in the entire county. Everyone from the east side went to one school, everyone from the west side of the county went to the other. We all attended the same classes, taught by the same teachers. I can’t see how there is any difference.

After high school, I joined the military and did six years there. When I got out, I was broke, but willing to work. I tried making it for a couple of years as a business owner, but we were soon technically homeless. My family and I lived in the storeroom of my business and we bathed in a 48 quart ice chest.

I took what little money we managed to scrape together and used it to rent a UHaul, then moved back to Florida. When I got there, I took a job in residential construction that paid $7.45 an hour. I spent 8 hours a day in the Florida summer heat, running electrical wire through roughed-out houses, taking home $950 a month to support a family of four. Our rent was $350 a month. The government told us that we wouldn’t qualify for public assistance as long as we were still married, so we got none.

Over the next 5 years, I moved jobs every time there was an opportunity to make more money: I worked at the airport repairing ground support equipment, at Disney repairing the electronic control systems on dancing chickens, at Sherwin Williams on paint manufacturing equipment, and at a stainless steel mill repairing stainless steel pipe manufacturing equipment. There were ups and downs. A few times, they hired me as a maintenance worker because they had a lot of broken equipment and then fired me as soon as I fixed everything that was broken. Still, I didn’t give up.

Each time I changed jobs, it was for more money. Over that 5 year period, I went from $7.50 an hour to $12 an hour, and finally to a salary of $30,000 a year. Then Bill Clinton signed a “most favored nation” treaty with China, flooding the market with cheap stainless steel, making it cheaper to import stainless steel products than it was to manufacture them, which put my employer out of business.

Finally tired of being laid off, and decided to take my volunteer firefighting occupation full time. I went to school, by working odd jobs during the day, and going to school at night. I graduated the fire academy and got hired. While I was in school, my wife and I got a divorce. Divorce is financially devastating, and the child support added up to about two thirds of my take home pay.

This was the poorest time in my life. I lost my car in the divorce, so I was running to work for a month before I could save enough for a bicycle. I lost 40 pounds that summer. After six more months of saving, I managed to buy a car at a buy here/pay here place. Now that I had a car, I was able to get a second job as a janitor, and then a third job as a lifeguard, to make ends meet.

I got a 4 year degree while I was at the fire department. I bought a house and got married for the second time. Then the mortgage failures of 2009 hit and I was soon filing bankruptcy.

Then my second wife filed for divorce. I left firefighting and became a teacher. Then I left teaching because it sucked and went back to a “bridge” program to leverage my paramedic skills into nursing. I got another Bachelor’s degree, and now I am about to finish a Masters.

But hey, none of that was due to hard work and perseverance. It was all luck and ‘white privilege’ that got me here.

Categories: Anti American left

12 Comments

Worker · October 29, 2025 at 12:43 pm

I could tell the same (kind of) story: now at 79 years old. I am (we are) comfortable, decent money coming in and own/work a small cattle ranch in an out of the way location.
One problem (IMO) is not may have every really gone hungry with no money to purchase food (including shelter). Not from necessarily making ‘bad choices’ but more from life circumstances.
Hunger will get your attention: real fast. Working one’s ass off may not get you fame and fortune, but it will keep you housed, fed and the opportunity to move up. Develop the mindset early on and the course is pretty much set…having said that, I do believe everyone needs: 1) to join the military, 2) start at the bottom of a job someplace and 3) go hungry for a period of time. Life lessons and all that….

Fred · October 29, 2025 at 1:53 pm

I am sorry you had it that rough but I can tell that you are unbeatable. As am I. Very inspiring and that is what good looks like.

Sailor Paul · October 29, 2025 at 2:18 pm

People who cry about working 10 whole hours of overtime.
I work 240-330 days a year, 12 hours a day minimum, 7 days a week, on a ship, away from home. Gnerally I’m up and working by 0430 and I usually try to wrap up around 2000, 8PM.
Under 100hrs a week is a joy compared to being a commercial fisherman, which I did from age 8 to 30, where after 16 hours you ate a meal to keep you going for another 6-8 hours before taking 7 hours off to shower, eat and sleep.
Yup, I sure do feel like life’s on easy mode. This year I’ll have over 300 days working on my boat, far from home.

I bought my dream home in Florida at 45. I rented up until then. Yes, my formal living room is larger than my parents’ entire house was. I EARNED every penny and suffered and did bonebreaking labor and did without, missing every holiday there is for MY ENTIRE ADULT LIFE. On Instagram I got a ‘must be nice’ from a sarcastic former college friend. I called her an unkind slang term for a vagina.
Losers will do a lot to attempt to justify their crappy lives. White privelige is just a dogwhistle for being lazy, weak, and stupid.

Tree Mike · October 29, 2025 at 2:21 pm

In my best Napoleon Dynamite: “Do chickens have talons?” NO, wait, I mean, “You’re LUCKEEEE.”
And persistent. Yeah, you may have mentioned it before, but it’s still hella impressive.
I guess you finally got the mate picking process worked out.

StBernard · October 29, 2025 at 2:26 pm

You sho know how to milk Dat white pribalidge! lol!

Milton · October 29, 2025 at 2:49 pm

You lucky bastard!

With a resume as complex as yours, it seems like back to business owner is what you are now lucky enough to try.
That is a truly amazing and inspiring story. Best regards.

Danny · October 29, 2025 at 4:30 pm

First — most of us have never claimed to be “better” than anyone else. That line of thought is pure socialist propaganda. Second — your life and success depend on your thoughts and actions.

And you, sir, along with a lot of other people in this country, are proof of that.

Henry · October 29, 2025 at 4:58 pm

DM, you are the textbook example of someone with grit, determination, perseverance, and self-confidence. You recovered from each setback due hard work while avoiding self-pity. The sheer range of jobs you’ve held over the years is a testimony to your intelligence and adaptability. It’s impressive, to say the least, to see how well you’ve done by never giving up. Kudos to you!

    Divemedic · October 29, 2025 at 5:38 pm

    Lazarus Long was always my fictional role model.

Nolan Parker · October 29, 2025 at 5:25 pm

I THOUGHT I had fought back against a world that seemed determined to keep me from achieving. You were Definitely a Lot Luckier than I.
You may have demonstrated perseverance for a while, but I’m thinking that everything after losing the house was a combination of stubbornness and a bit of This shits done gone and got Personal..
Congratulations on being That kinda guy.

J J · October 29, 2025 at 5:35 pm

“You’re just lucky” is an easier thing for them to say than “I’m too lazy to work hard, too self centered to make sacrifices and too brainwashed to believe anything other than everyone owes me a comfortable life of receiving whatever I want.”

Anonymous · October 29, 2025 at 6:15 pm

It’s about choices. “Luck” may determine the starting point at age 18 but choices determine the path and end point. Everyone has choices: use of time (work vs chasing fun), use of resources, delayed gratification, self improvement, self discipline, attitude.

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