The stark reality that the wealth gap among humans continues to expand is not an unforeseen consequence of market forces, but rather a deliberate outcome of policy choices and social dynamics. While many discussions around wealth inequality often focus on growth or technology as root causes, the persistent trend shows that concentrated wealth is increasingly the result of systemic advantages afforded to a small segment of the population. Data consistently reveals that the richest individuals accumulate wealth at a rate that far outpaces the income growth of the average person, suggesting that this disparity is a product of decisions made by those in power, rather than an inevitable economic phenomenon. The lack of substantial movement toward equitable distribution of resources highlights a collective reluctance to confront this truth, leaving a significant portion of the population under the illusion that the current distribution is a natural order, when it is, in fact, a fabricated reality driven by policy frameworks and institutional priorities.