On the whole wealth did not help people. Most safe countries had strict quotas on the numbers they admitted. Please also note that all Jews were deprived of their money, either before or on entry to camps. There were also severe restrictions on the amount of money that Jews were allowed on entry to ghettos.
One major way that rich and poor were affected differently in the Civil War was the draft. If a more wealthy person had 300 dollars, he could buy his way out of the draft or pay someone to replace him.
An act for "enrolling and calling out the National Forces"
During the US Civil War, rich men could pay others to take their place. During the Vietnam War, rich men entered wealthy colleges to obtain "draft deferrments." Also, wealthy men could pay $300 to avoid being drafted. This upset many poor people, and the Civil War was also now know as the "Poor Man's War". It earned this title because so many poor men, and poor slaves were fighting for money, and were forced to fight.
one starts out poor and works his way up the other has been made officer by means of a wealthy background...
Only the wealthy benefited from American investments, but the poor did not.
In the Holocaust itself rich and poor Jews were treated alike: they were slaughtered. (One could not buy one's way out of the Holocaust).
Money made no difference. You couldn't buy yourself out of the Holocaust. The Nazis wanted to kill all Jews that they had control over.
it is poor
he lived regularly not to wealthy nor too poor
poor
he was poor
poor
The Anasazi were very wealthy.
He was wealthy.
An antonym for the word 'wealthy' would be 'poor'.
poor
Greece has both wealthy people and poor people. But many are middle class.