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  • 2012-07-22 (xsd:date)
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  • Son of a Woodcutter (en)
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  • Many of us have known (or known of) people who came of age in circumstances of economic deprivation and, although they later became well off, remained thrifty their whole lives. Having learned they could make do with very little, they retained simple tastes and were content merely to live comfortably, never going in for the luxurious or ostentatious, and never forgetting that the hard times they once knew might someday recur. On the flip side, many of us have known people who grew up in affluence and never seriously considered their circumstances might change, and who were therefore ill-equipped to get by when their households experienced reversals of fortune. One common online anecdote offers a cautionary tale that contrasts these two groups: those who have seen the wolf at the door and know that although he may have left, he might return at any time; and those who have never seen a wolf and therefore have never entertained the notion that he might someday appear. Thus it is that the self-made man who has pulled in billions of dollars remains a frugal tipper, while the son who has earned nothing on his own has become an extravagant tipper: Whatever merits one might find in this story, though, it isn't literally true as told about computer mogul Bill Gates; it's just an illustrative tale into which someone has slipped the name of a person widely recognized as being vastly wealthy. For starters, Bill Gates' son, Rory John Gates, was born in 1999 and was therefore only twelve years old when we first started encountering the current version of this anecdote — at that age, it's unlikely he was dining out at restaurants away from his parents, much less lavishing $500 tips on the waitstaff. More important, though, is the fact that Bill Gates is far from the son of a woodcutter: he grew up in a well-to-do family with a father who was a prominent lawyer, attended an exclusive prep school, and enrolled at Harvard before dropping out to start his own software company. (As Time magazine characterized him, Bill Gates is a classic American riches-to-even-more-riches story.) And although we don't know what kind of a tipper Bill Gates might be, he could hardly be described as thrifty, having spent $63 million on building a 66,000-square foot house. We've also seen this tale told about other business titans possessed of mega-wealth, such as John D. Rockefeller: (en)
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