Let me tell you about the phone call that still burns in my memory.

I was sitting in my truck outside a warehouse I’d just bought with cash flow from one of my boring businesses. Six figures in the bank, debt-free, and a system that printed money whether I was in the room or not. My old college buddy—let’s call him Mark—rang me in a panic. He’s a surgeon pulling north of $350k a year. House in the suburbs, two leased SUVs, private school for the kids. On paper, he was crushing it.

But the IRS had just hit him with a surprise bill, and his wife had maxed out the credit cards again “because we deserve it after all this hard work.” He was staring at the same quiet panic I used to feel before I rewired everything. Except Mark wasn’t broke because of bad investments. He was broke because the system he trusted—the government safety nets, the endless “you deserve” messaging, the entitlement culture—had trained his brain to treat comfort as a birthright and discipline as optional.

“Entitlement programs don’t just cost taxpayers money. They cost high performers their edge. They turn ambition into atrophy.”

The Day I Saw the Lie Up Close

I grew up believing hard work was the only path. No fancy degree, no trust fund—just grind, systems, and an iron will. I paid the discipline tax early: 4:30 a.m. wake-ups, cold showers, saying no to every shiny distraction. That’s how I built my first $100k net worth without a single “hot tip.”

But around 2018–2020 I watched the entitlement machine go into overdrive. Stimulus checks turned into monthly expectations. Unemployment benefits paid more than some jobs. College loan “forgiveness” talk became a political football. And the message to every high earner? “Don’t worry, the government’s got you.”

I saw doctors, lawyers, and six-figure entrepreneurs quietly slow down. Why push harder when the safety net keeps expanding? Why delay gratification when the culture screams you “deserve” the upgrade? Comfort masquerading as compassion. The same silent killer I wrote about in The Psychology of Making Money.

How Entitlements Rewire Your Brain for Broke

Remember the hedonic treadmill I talk about constantly? You make more, you spend more, net worth barely moves. Entitlement programs supercharge that treadmill.

They teach three deadly lies:

  1. “You deserve it without earning it.” — This is the same “you deserve it” lie that keeps high earners permanently broke. It destroys the craving for hard work I had to rewire into my own nervous system.
  2. “Someone else will always catch you.” — That’s not freedom. That’s dependency. Real wealth comes from owning boring businesses, stacking cash-flow assets, and building moats around your personal brand.
  3. “Hard work is optional if the system is fair.” — The system isn’t fair. Never has been. Capitalism rewards value creation. Tariffs protect American producers so we can keep creating that value instead of subsidizing the rest of the world while we hand out checks at home.

I stopped chasing motivation years ago and started chasing systems. Entitlement culture is the opposite of systems—it’s the ultimate excuse to coast. And coasting always ends at the bottom of the hill.

The Real Math Nobody Wants to Admit

Entitlement spending is now projected to consume more than 60% of the federal budget by 2030. That’s not compassion; that’s math that guarantees higher taxes, inflation, and slower growth for the very people who actually fund the system.

I love tariffs because they force the world to play fair with American workers. They protect the productive class so we can keep forging wealth instead of watching it get siphoned off to fund programs that reward non-production. Free markets aren’t perfect, but they’re the only engine that has ever lifted millions out of poverty. Handouts just create more poverty with better branding.

“The discipline tax is paid either early or forever. Entitlement programs make sure the bill keeps getting bigger for the people who actually pay it.”

What I Did Instead (And What You Should Do)

When I realized the system incentivized softness, I doubled down on the Self-Made Man’s Code:

  • I built a $10k “Screw You” fund that grows every month—no matter what Washington does.
  • I fire clients faster than I acquire them if they bring entitlement energy.
  • I grind in silence. No virtue-signaling about “giving back” while I quietly fund my own family’s future.
  • I turned boredom into a weapon. No more filling every minute with noise that distracts from building.
  • I only bet on assets I can control—boring businesses, cash-flow real estate, and skills that print money in any economy.

The moment I stopped caring what the culture said I “deserved” and started obsessing over what I could control, everything changed. My net worth compounded while my friends who leaned on the safety net stayed stuck in the same lifestyle-inflation trap.

The Choice Is Yours

Entitlement programs aren’t going away tomorrow. But you don’t have to play their game.

Pay the discipline tax now. Rewire your brain to crave hard work. Build systems that run whether you “feel like it” or not. Stay hungry after you’ve made it. And support policies—like tariffs—that protect the producers instead of punishing them.

Because in a world full of soft options, the only real freedom is the freedom you forge yourself.

— Jaxon Forge
Founder, MoneyForged.com
@MoneyForgedHQ on X