Brian Noble
Gratefully in Recovery
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2004
- Messages
- 17,997
You know how it goes. Anyone driving faster than I do is a maniac, and anyone driving slower than I do is unreasonable.
When thumbing thru the WSJ yesterday read interesting poll results asking millionares i.e. "the rich" what level of accumulated assets/$ one must have to be considered wealthy...
$7.5 million
apparently looking down on the 'po folk is all relative based upon your perch on the totem pole![]()
The Evil Rich - are they evil because they are rich, or rich because they are evil; I always get that mixed up.
I agree with cvjw; be careful who you pick as "Rich". Are they the ones that didn't gamble, smoke, or drink their money away; worked hard, lived below their means, saved for the future, didn't party in excess and studied hard to get ahead? Oh, those guys. Yeah, they leave a bad taste in my mouth, too. And shame on them for having any expectations at all that may rub someone the wrong way.
No, those guys are me, and I'm not "rich."I'm always floored by the uniquely American notion that wealthy people must have worked hard, and low/middle class people must not have worked as hard (or must have wasted their money on vices).
In reality, the correlation just isn't that high.
No, those guys are me, and I'm not "rich."I'm always floored by the uniquely American notion that wealthy people must have worked hard, and low/middle class people must not have worked as hard (or must have wasted their money on vices).
In reality, the correlation just isn't that high.
Yes! Precisely what I said earlier, and well put!
I must say that the hardest "work" I've ever done was at minimum wage. I feel very fortunate that my work now comes from my knowledge and experience instead of the sweat of my brow or the strength of my back. There should be a conversation going on in this country about the priority we give to higher education. 30 years ago, if you couldn't afford college, you could get a pell grant. That is just not true now.
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Not everyone can be an Astronaut . . .
I must say that the hardest "work" I've ever done was at minimum wage. I feel very fortunate that my work now comes from my knowledge and experience instead of the sweat of my brow or the strength of my back. There should be a conversation going on in this country about the priority we give to higher education. 30 years ago, if you couldn't afford college, you could get a pell grant. That is just not true now.
They often work smarter, not harder and tend to be better at living within their means.No, those guys are me, and I'm not "rich."I'm always floored by the uniquely American notion that wealthy people must have worked hard, and low/middle class people must not have worked as hard (or must have wasted their money on vices).
In reality, the correlation just isn't that high.
A common college approach seems to be to have high tuition and give a lot of merit based scholarships. That way they can hand pick their students more effectively and end up around the same costs as many other schools they might be competing with otherwise.tell me about it, it has changed so much from my 24 y.o. DS to my youngest a HS senior. He's been accepted everywhere he applied, now watching the offers roll in - you'd think receiving $25 K a year in academic scholarships would be a good thing, not when tuition is over $55K a year @ Drexel.
the new gov of PA wants to cut educational funding by 50%, translating to tier 1 schools increasing a couple of thousand by next semester, with the tier 2's easily $5k more a year
, we won't know until July or August the final tuition due.
OT tuition rant overon the bright side, since TS values are down as a whole, @ least family won't be looking at me to sell my DVC
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They often work smarter, not harder and tend to be better at living within their means.
They often work smarter, not harder and tend to be better at living within their means.
A common college approach seems to be to have high tuition and give a lot of merit based scholarships. That way they can hand pick their students more effectively and end up around the same costs as many other schools they might be competing with otherwise.
I hope any perks are not tied to APs, or fast passes.
We ride very few attractions, so we can always get FPs if we want. Besides, I don't like using FPs, as the que often tells much of the attraction's storyline.
As far as AP discounts... What about those of us who have points split between WDW, DLR, and VB? Worse yet, what about a Member who just uses 1500 points a year at HH? Rare, yes. But still must be considered.
MG
I hope any perks are not tied to APs, or fast passes.
We ride very few attractions, so we can always get FPs if we want. Besides, I don't like using FPs, as the que often tells much of the attraction's storyline.
As far as AP discounts... What about those of us who have points split between WDW, DLR, and VB? Worse yet, what about a Member who just uses 1500 points a year at HH? Rare, yes. But still must be considered.
MG
No, those guys are me, and I'm not "rich."I'm always floored by the uniquely American notion that wealthy people must have worked hard, and low/middle class people must not have worked as hard (or must have wasted their money on vices).
In reality, the correlation just isn't that high.