What Jewish Wealth Habits Can Teach Anyone About Money | Lee Jenkins

As a rookie stockbroker in the mid-1980s, Lee Jenkins noticed something striking about his Jewish clients and colleagues: their relationship with money was fundamentally different from anything he had grown up seeing. Curious, he started asking questions, listening, and learning. Reading Steven Silbiger’s The Jewish Phenomenon helped it all click into place.

One statistic says it all: Jewish people make up only 2.4% of the U.S. population, yet nearly 1 in 3 American millionaires is Jewish. So what’s going on? What are they doing differently?

Here are the 8 wealth principles Lee Jenkins observed over decades of working with Jewish clients — principles he believes anyone can apply, regardless of background.

1. They Build Generational Wealth, and Avoid Single Generation Consumption

Whether religious or not, many live by the spirit of Proverbs 13:22: “A good man leaves an inheritance to his children’s children.” Money isn’t primarily a tool to fund your own lifestyle — it’s a vehicle to empower the next generation. The question isn’t “what can I afford?” but “what can I leave behind?”

2. They Give Assets, Not Appliances

At weddings and celebrations, forget the toaster or the china set. In many Jewish families, gifts come in the form of cash or stocks. The logic is straightforward: give something that appreciates over time, not something that depreciates the moment it leaves the store. It’s the difference between a gift that grows and a gift that gathers dust.

3. They Expect to Be Wealthy — and Feel Ashamed If They’re Not

In the Jewish-American culture Lee Jenkins observed, financial success is the norm, not the exception. Where he grew up, struggle was common and wealth was rare. Among his Jewish clients, it was the opposite: there was pride in building wealth and a genuine sense of shame in mismanaging it. Shifting your baseline expectation from scarcity to prosperity is a powerful mental reset.

4. They Use Pain as Fuel, Not as an Excuse

Jewish history is marked by centuries of persecution and hardship. Yet rather than being defined or paralyzed by that past, they channeled it into drive and determination. Lee Jenkins draws a direct parallel to the African-American experience: the same history of oppression can either hold a community back or propel it forward. That choice is everything.

5. They Focus on Being Rich, Not Looking Rich

No flashy cars, no designer logos for show. Many of Lee Jenkins’ wealthiest Jewish clients drove reliable, modest vehicles — not because they couldn’t afford more, but because they cared more about being wealthy than appearing wealthy. In an era of social media flexing, this distinction couldn’t be more relevant.

6. They Are Selectively Extravagant and Prudently Frugal

This is one of the most nuanced principles: they would spend generously — even lavishly — on education, meaningful experiences, investments, and causes they cared deeply about. But those same people would clip grocery coupons without a second thought. This isn’t about being cheap. It’s about being intentional. Knowing when to spend big and when to hold back is a rare and powerful financial skill.

7. They See Sales as a Noble Profession

Many Jewish families actively encouraged their children to pursue careers in sales. Why? Because sales creates opportunity, teaches communication, builds resilience, and uncaps your earning potential. Rather than looking down on the profession, they viewed it as a gateway to entrepreneurship and financial freedom — a mindset shift that opens a lot of doors.

8. They Practice Group Economics

They hired each other, referred each other, and funded each other’s business ventures. This wasn’t about exclusion — Lee Jenkins himself had many Jewish clients — but about a deep commitment to keeping wealth circulating within the community. The dollar stayed in motion. It’s a model of economic solidarity that Lee Jenkins explicitly calls for in the Black community: not just supporting one another, but building real collective financial power.

The Bottom Line

As Lee Jenkins puts it best: you don’t have to be Jewish to apply these principles. Wisdom is wisdom — and it works for anybody.

These 8 habits aren’t secret formulas reserved for a chosen few. They are mindsets, choices, and cultural practices passed down through generations — and every single one of them is available to you starting today.

Les lois bibliques illégales ou immorales au 21ème siècle

La Bible, texte fondateur du judaïsme et du christianisme, contient des centaines de lois, de préceptes et de récits qui reflètent les normes sociales, religieuses et juridiques de l’Antiquité. Certaines de ces règles, si elles étaient appliquées littéralement aujourd’hui, seraient non seulement contraires aux valeurs démocratiques modernes (égalité, droits humains, liberté individuelle), mais aussi illégales selon les lois internationales et nationales.

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Dragon Ball | Mangas et Films

Mangas

TitreVolumesDatesCanonScénarioPériode
Dragon Ball421984–1995ToriyamaEnfance de Goku → Fin de l’arc Boo
Dragon Ball Super242015–en coursToriyamaPost-arc Boo (avant l’épilogue de DBZ)
Jaco the Galactic Patrolman12013🔶ToriyamaPréquel (lié à l’origine de Goku)
Dragon Ball Minus12014ToriyamaOrigine de Goku (intégré à Broly)
Dragon Ball SD (Super Deformed)102010–en coursOoishiParodie des arcs classiques
Légende :

✅ Canon : Fait partie de l’histoire principale approuvée par Toriyama.
🔶 Semi-canon : Éléments partiellement intégrés (ex : Jaco explique des détails de Super).
❌ Non-canon : Œuvres dérivées sans impact sur la timeline officielle.

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Petite Histoire de Responsabilité

 

C’est l’histoire de quatre individus : Chacun, Quelqu’un, Quiconque et Personne.

Un travail important devait être fait, et on avait demandé à Chacun de s’en occuper :

  • Chacun était assuré que Quelqu’un allait le faire.
  • Quelqu’un s’est emporté parce qu’il considérait que ce travail était la responsabilité de Chacun.
  • Chacun croyait que Quiconque pouvait le faire, mais Personne ne s’était rendu compte que Chacun ne le ferait pas.

À la fin, Chacun blâmait Quelqu’un, du fait que Personne n’avait fait ce que Quiconque aurait dû faire.

50 Life Lessons From An 80 Year Old Man

  1. Have a Firm Handshake : a firm handshake is necessary in life for making an incredible impression on everyone you meet. Nobody takes anyone seriously when their handshake isn’t solid.
  2. Look People in the Eye : just like having a great handshake, looking people in the eye establishes a great connection with the person on the other end. It shows you’re serious, enthusiast, listening, and actually want to have the conversation.
  3. Sing in the Shower : what’s life when you can’t relax and have a good sing in the shower. Let out all that tension whilst you have the time.
  4. Own a Great Stereo System : music makes the world turn. It lifts your spirits, motivates you and contributes to your overall mood and happiness. Make sure you’re playing your music on a stereo that won’t let you down.
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Life after people

On the heels of the History channel special that explored what Earth might be like if the human race were suddenly to disappear comes a series that provides, in even-more detail, a picture of a post-human future, revealing the fate of structures like the Sears Tower and the Sistine Chapel and creatures that might inherit the places we once lived. Supporting the visuals and special effects are interviews with specialists from the fields of engineering, botany, biology, geology and archaeology.

life_after_people

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