Of course. Just idiotic. |
NP here. I'd be thrilled if my daughters could land a spouse that earns $800,000 a year. |
Ignore the jealous haters. |
| Um we made about $240k combined OP and had no issue with full pay for our only child to go to an Ivy. Why would anyone think someone else should pay or subsidize their choice to have off-spring? |
Do you have any idea where your taxes go? This is the basis of so many economic policies. |
+1 I had a moment when I thought about the hefty bill and compared it to what others pay or what we might have paid elsewhere. But it's not just the quality of education to consider. Worth every dollar! Overall school reputation, and for the field they decide to start their careers in, opens many doors. And I don't mean Ivy vs non-Ivy. My DC and university friends all landed interesting, high paying jobs. They are all capable, smart kids but there are lots of capable, smart kids everywhere. DC is very privileged that we are first able to pay and second that his parents made the choice to pay abet for other reasons I was rather naive about school reputation; my eyes are wide open now. There is nothing fair about it for kids who can't afford it but I'm glad life circumstances worked in DC's favor. |
I’m the Bama/Stanford pp. Guess the sarcasm didn’t get through. |
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<<I'd be thrilled if my daughters could land a spouse that earns $800,000 a year.>>
Am I the only one who seems being "kept" somewhere along the spectrum that ends with prostitution Do you not see how this mindset plays into the mindset of many men who resent/hate women (vs respect them as equals)??? |
+1. The future is not random loans, but truly INVESTING in students |
Yeah, i wonder about the 'wage gap"... So so unfair. |
| Hey now - I stayed home, my family benefitted, and society benefitted because I have volunteered a lot. I think my husband and my acting and working as a team has been a great role model for our kids. And no, we could not afford to send them to the most expensive schools and I don’t think that has hurt them at all. At the end of the day they will end up in excellent grad schools, they will be debt free, we will have retirement savings and none of us are on anxiety meds freaked out by professional or financial anxiety. I’d say to give all of that up to send our kids to expensive schools we cannot afford would make us suckers. |
Who cares whether someone chooses to raise their kids vs contracting out to nannies and the like. I did a little of both, and both lifestyles worked for me at those particular times. Yes DH is a high earner, which is one of the reasons it was an easy decision to be there for my family. And fwiw, he was only making $250K 12 years ago and before that even less as an independent contractor when I supported him with supplemental income and health insurance. But I have to say, Easy Street is quite pleasant, and I don’t see myself returning to the workforce ever. Very happy with the schedule I have now. |
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Troll |
Still a sucker, though. Sorry. |