Poverty is designed; it is a result continuously shaped through long-term social environments, family education, ideology, and group interactions. The belief systems an individual encounters during growth will continuously influence their cognitive structure and behavioral patterns, leading them unconsciously to replicate existing life paths. Human motivation for action can be divided into external pressure-driven and internal interest-driven; the former comes from social evaluation and survival anxiety, while the latter stems from genuine interest and self-identity. Long-term dominance by different motivations will shape vastly different life trajectories. At the same time, when a certain choice becomes a mainstream consensus in society, it often means that early structural advantages have been diluted by a large number of participants, making individuals more prone to competitive maintenance rather than breakthrough leaps. Therefore, the so-called continuation of class differences is not just a resource issue but also a repetition of cognition and choice patterns across generations. True change comes from individuals recognizing these implicit influences and re-establishing decision-making methods that better meet their own needs within real-world constraints.

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