CA is a different beast though. I doubt this will be the outcome in the DC region. |
But…you were talking about things other than money. Get your story straight. |
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All marriages have prenups. It's just either you two that decide the terms, or the government.
Usually it's to protect assets or businesses that already exist. Idk if you can do a prenup for "maybe someday I'll make $5M and you wont get it" but I'm not a lawyer. |
I still am - nothing in my response suggests otherwise. Get your head straight. |
Then infantilize women so much that you think they aren't capable of sticking up for and protecting themselves? Either within or outside of a prenup? |
Not surprising to see that in your teeny tiny head, only women can fall into this category. Take a moment and think deeper. |
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To PP - no, we don’t infantilize women. In fact, women are well aware that the end responsibility for the their kids born in marriage remains with them. The 50:50 formula became the law to ensure kids would get a fair share of the estate from either parent even in case of divorce. Men tend to abandon kids from a prior marriage when they find a wetter P.. later in life. Women tend to remain caretakers for young kids and any SN adult kids which is an objective drag on women’s ability to earn.
So I would only sign a prenup with an automatic expiration date - when the first child is born to marriage. |
OP does seem the the mother and is looking to protect the interests of her Special Little Man. |
You're the one framing her that way, goofy. Goodness you are bad at this. Collect yourself, follow the thread and try to make just a bit of sense. |
I am interested to hear about this. |
| I have no problems with prenups in many instances but in this case would advise the lower earner not to sign and to move on if the other party insists. |
She chose all of that. He doesn't need to pay her for her own decisions. |
Selective infantilization and invocation of agency is their speciality. |
You realize that a prenup can protect her interests too? It's more likely to be invalidated if it's too one-sided. |
This is a great example of a values litmus test. Here I think what's unreasonable is that you would divorce somebody you loved for not seeing them very much. The millions seem more like a windfall/luck and neither would be harmed by splitting up $28M into $14M. I don't think they needed a prenup. Elon Musk's first wife wrote an article about her life as Elon's first wife. She found the prenup process/pressure from his investors very ugly and upsetting. She was put under a lot of pressure from people who were more concerned about their financial investment in the company than the health of her marriage. And as we now see, no amount of money makes up for choosing a toxic spouse. The impact on her kids' lives is permanent. They literally find out about new siblings randomly from social media. |