Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those poor girls!!! I really hope their company takes care of them and gives them any support they need to work through such a traumatic experience.
I’ve got no word for his behavior.
“Work through their trauma”?
AYFKM?![]()
This is one of the things that’s wrong with this country. Assuming that people are so fragile they’d be scarred by a shouting match with some a-hole. Life is FULL of jerks like that. If people sought therapy every time they encountered one, they’d never have time to do anything else.
The Russians and Chinese are doubled over in laughter at how soft this country is becoming. It’s shameful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wealth managers are the dumbest of the dumb people in finance
+1
They’re mostly meatheads who couldn’t handle harder courses of study so they shuffle money from one pot to another and are ridiculously well compensated for doing so.
I think this guys is the scum of the world but I appreciate your savvy insights into wealth management. I’m an advisor without a MBA from Harvard or a silt
Overpriced degree. I went to a small private college but and made 1.4M last year as a 36yo. I guess I may not be as intelligent as you but I’m smart enough to have my family and kids set for life.
Do I deserve to make this money, heck no, the industry is lucrative (as are many other industry’s). Do I work very hard and have a load of stress and anxiety, you bet. All my friends in more prestigious “banking jobs” are envious of the time I’m able to devote to my family and would give their left arm to switch jobs. Glad you see it once sided.
I think you proved his point?
We have a wealth management account at ML and pp did not prove the point to me. I would rather have a hard working, diligent wealth manager with a degree from a good small college than an arrogant entitled big talking Harvard grad. He clearly is committed to his family and will understand our desires to put the security and welfare of our family first.
Our ML advisor is a person of color and extremely respectful and hard working. Not an Ivy grad. We care much more about hard work, commitment to clients, character, communication skills, integrity and diligence.
We will be asking how ML responds officially to this deplorable manager.
It repulses me that you use the terms respectful and hard working as the first descriptors for a person of color.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wealth managers are the dumbest of the dumb people in finance
+1
They’re mostly meatheads who couldn’t handle harder courses of study so they shuffle money from one pot to another and are ridiculously well compensated for doing so.
I think this guys is the scum of the world but I appreciate your savvy insights into wealth management. I’m an advisor without a MBA from Harvard or a silt
Overpriced degree. I went to a small private college but and made 1.4M last year as a 36yo. I guess I may not be as intelligent as you but I’m smart enough to have my family and kids set for life.
Do I deserve to make this money, heck no, the industry is lucrative (as are many other industry’s). Do I work very hard and have a load of stress and anxiety, you bet. All my friends in more prestigious “banking jobs” are envious of the time I’m able to devote to my family and would give their left arm to switch jobs. Glad you see it once sided.
I think you proved his point?
We have a wealth management account at ML and pp did not prove the point to me. I would rather have a hard working, diligent wealth manager with a degree from a good small college than an arrogant entitled big talking Harvard grad. He clearly is committed to his family and will understand our desires to put the security and welfare of our family first.
Our ML advisor is a person of color and extremely respectful and hard working. Not an Ivy grad. We care much more about hard work, commitment to clients, character, communication skills, integrity and diligence.
We will be asking how ML responds officially to this deplorable manager.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Holy over reaction Batman? Like what was wrong with his smoothie? He’s acting like it had a turn floating in it.
Reddit says it had peanuts in it, which his son is allergic too. So probably a mixed up order.
We have a peanut allergy in family, I can definitely see getting upset about a mix up if my son drank it and felt sick, but these things do happen.
Peanuts are an ingredient in a smoothie?
Anyhow he should have just nicely notified them of their mistake or calmly asked for a manager.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wealth managers are the dumbest of the dumb people in finance
+1
They’re mostly meatheads who couldn’t handle harder courses of study so they shuffle money from one pot to another and are ridiculously well compensated for doing so.
I think this guys is the scum of the world but I appreciate your savvy insights into wealth management. I’m an advisor without a MBA from Harvard or a silt
Overpriced degree. I went to a small private college but and made 1.4M last year as a 36yo. I guess I may not be as intelligent as you but I’m smart enough to have my family and kids set for life.
Do I deserve to make this money, heck no, the industry is lucrative (as are many other industry’s). Do I work very hard and have a load of stress and anxiety, you bet. All my friends in more prestigious “banking jobs” are envious of the time I’m able to devote to my family and would give their left arm to switch jobs. Glad you see it once sided.
I think you proved his point?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My son is anaphylactically allergic to nuts, and if someone had served me something with nuts by mistake, I would have chills down my spine. This is how people die. This is how my son ended up with a major anaphylactic reation one day when a restaurant served my husband a dish with peanuts by mistake, and he gave my son a taste of it, thinking it did not contain nuts.
So I understand his fear. Sadly his fear revealed him to be a racist bully. Taking a tone and reminding the server that certain mistakes can be deadly would have been sufficient.
Mistakes happen- I’m assuming if someone is that allergic you always have an epipen and Benadryl on hand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Holy over reaction Batman? Like what was wrong with his smoothie? He’s acting like it had a turn floating in it.
Reddit says it had peanuts in it, which his son is allergic too. So probably a mixed up order.
We have a peanut allergy in family, I can definitely see getting upset about a mix up if my son drank it and felt sick, but these things do happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wealth managers are the dumbest of the dumb people in finance
+1
They’re mostly meatheads who couldn’t handle harder courses of study so they shuffle money from one pot to another and are ridiculously well compensated for doing so.
I think this guys is the scum of the world but I appreciate your savvy insights into wealth management. I’m an advisor without a MBA from Harvard or a silt
Overpriced degree. I went to a small private college but and made 1.4M last year as a 36yo. I guess I may not be as intelligent as you but I’m smart enough to have my family and kids set for life.
Do I deserve to make this money, heck no, the industry is lucrative (as are many other industry’s). Do I work very hard and have a load of stress and anxiety, you bet. All my friends in more prestigious “banking jobs” are envious of the time I’m able to devote to my family and would give their left arm to switch jobs. Glad you see it once sided.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My son is anaphylactically allergic to nuts, and if someone had served me something with nuts by mistake, I would have chills down my spine. This is how people die. This is how my son ended up with a major anaphylactic reation one day when a restaurant served my husband a dish with peanuts by mistake, and he gave my son a taste of it, thinking it did not contain nuts.
So I understand his fear. Sadly his fear revealed him to be a racist bully. Taking a tone and reminding the server that certain mistakes can be deadly would have been sufficient.
Mistakes happen- I’m assuming if someone is that allergic you always have an epipen and Benadryl on hand.
Epipens are not foolproof and can trigger serious cardiac side effects. Also, there is a rebound effect after they given, which can lead to a second, even more severe anaphylactic reaction a few minutes to a few hours later, which is why hospitalization after an Epipen injection is sometimes necessary. You can't just walk around with an Epipen and think "mistakes can happen". No, you can still die.
I am not excusing this man's reaction, BTW. I am simply placing it into the context that it was rooted in fear for his son.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wealth managers are the dumbest of the dumb people in finance
+1
They’re mostly meatheads who couldn’t handle harder courses of study so they shuffle money from one pot to another and are ridiculously well compensated for doing so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My son is anaphylactically allergic to nuts, and if someone had served me something with nuts by mistake, I would have chills down my spine. This is how people die. This is how my son ended up with a major anaphylactic reation one day when a restaurant served my husband a dish with peanuts by mistake, and he gave my son a taste of it, thinking it did not contain nuts.
So I understand his fear. Sadly his fear revealed him to be a racist bully. Taking a tone and reminding the server that certain mistakes can be deadly would have been sufficient.
Mistakes happen- I’m assuming if someone is that allergic you always have an epipen and Benadryl on hand.