Or, "attributing everything to oneself" vs. "recognizing external factors outside of one's control".
The Wealthy love to think everybody can do it, that it is all their work, and that it is a matter of character, but it isn't. This leads to thinking the poor are not only poor because of their choices, but they somehow are lesser people.
In the current situation, the poor usually work for other people...other people whose mind is profit. The wealthy almost invariably make money off the labor of others. For example, kettlebells are made in iron foundries. Anybody here work in an iron foundry? Anybody own one? Books are printed, anybody work in the paper industry? When you get down to the "work" upon which other things are based, you see a lot of sweat and low pay. At the top, you see rich people pushing numbers around.
That is how capitalism works, but, that is only an economic system, not a moral one, and when the love of money takes over, and becomes the definition of the person, that is very bad.
Note: I am not wealthy or poor, but in the situation I have chosen, and I have none of the habits of "poor" people listed above, and many are health choices anybody can make, but the reality of life is that most people live according to the circumstances. The wealthy live a certain way because they are wealthy, not because those ways led to them being wealthy. While you can find certain decisions along the way, the opportunity has to be there. If it is not, then they cannot be wealthy. In America, it is often thought "anybody" can do it, because many rich people have poor beginnings, but even so, that is not for everybody and relies on a very particular set of circumstances.
Society demands that the Poor outnumber the Wealthy, otherwise, it is bunch of wealthy people with nobody to do things for them.