I am going to quote in its entirety a comment at Hacker News. Jason Trigg is the young philantropist referenced by the NYT article.
I went to college with dozens of Jason Triggs (including myself). We’d talk all the time about the money we’d make right out of college and how much good we’d do. (“$36k to work at a soulless consulting company? That’s amazing! I’m living on less than 1k/month in college. I could save 5K and give 10k away and not even notice!”) We had plans to give 20, 30, or 50 percent of our income away. Some of us even managed to do it for a couple years. The world gets to you, though. Your coworkers that dress nicer and go to happy hour with the boss get promoted. It gets tiresome to commute from a tiny apartment in New Jersey. You buy a house or get married to somebody who doesn’t make much money. The stock market tanks and takes your savings with it. You figure out that you hate consulting and end up teaching science in a junior high. After a couple years, I’d bet that the average charitable contribution of my peer group had gone down to 5% or less.
I wish Mr. Trigg luck, but we’ve already lived his story. He might get a few good years in, but his life is unlikely to work out like he plans
I am going to quote in its entirety a comment at Hacker News. Jason Trigg is the young philantropist referenced by the NYT article.
Source.