Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are the 'working rich' on a street of mostly inherited wealth rich. Not much in common, nor do our paths intersect.
How do you know your street is mostly "inherited wealth rich"? I doubt there's a single street in the DC area where a majority are inherited wealth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Through the kids' schools. Beyond that the super rich live in a world unto themselves.
This. I grew up on the low end of mass rich and went to school with several kids whose families were on the Forbes 400 including George Soros and Rupert Murdoch. Our parents were not friends.
Yes, they stay away and isolated. It is very sad condition to be super rich. They are afraid of little people who
might ask them for something.. opportunity .. money.. etc. They don't want to be bothered.
It is a lonely lonely isolating world. It so much more fun to be poor. You can actually
be among people and interact with them on normal human level without all that
distance and protection from them. You can live in normal homes among other homes
without gates, security people, armed cars and without worry that someone
is after you all the time. What a feeling of freedom that no money can buy.. priceless freedom.
Good to be poor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think super rich means that you don't fly commercial and that what you spend on PJ's is of little concern.
HHI < 250K, and what we spend on pajamas isn't a significant concern in our budget, either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ This is why the "normal rich" can delude themselves that they're "middle class" in some way. After all they are "in the middle" between their secretary and the super-rich who feel they snub them.
Its bc most working professionals making 7 figures like law firm partner, surgeon, lobbyist, finance type grew up as upper middle class so they feel middle class and typically aren't big spender flashy types in this area. These are not typically trust fund types, but smart people from educated upper middle class backgrounds. The trust fund types typically have much lower paying jobs, like working at nonprofits or in the media. They don't need the $$ so don't need/want those long hours professional jobs.

Anonymous wrote:Through the kids' schools. Beyond that the super rich live in a world unto themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To put it in perspective, how often do you (UMC) hangout and socialize with your landscaper? ...not the owner but the guys cutting your lawn? The is a far greater difference between someone with $80million+ Net Worth and your, say, $2 million NW than between your $2 million NW and that of your landscaper’s.
The ultra wealthy are an entirely different stratosphere of power and influence able to affect many areas of our society and future.
The UMC and lower wealthy live luxurious lives compared to most but still have little or no power in comparison to the ultra wealthy.
All the time. My landscaper is a nice guy. Got him his largest gig in a whole condo development and talk to his crew.
Anonymous wrote:How much interaction does your typical person in a rich suburb of the professional-managerial class (say a Chevy Chase or Greenwich) have with the "out of sight" rich?
And where would you draw the line between the "mass rich" and the really, really rich?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think super rich means that you don't fly commercial and that what you spend on PJ's is of little concern.
HHI < 250K, and what we spend on pajamas isn't a significant concern in our budget, either.
Anonymous wrote:I think super rich means that you don't fly commercial and that what you spend on PJ's is of little concern.
Anonymous wrote:We are the 'working rich' on a street of mostly inherited wealth rich. Not much in common, nor do our paths intersect.
Anonymous wrote:They also speak different language and the whole conversation would be
sort of like a smart toddler talking with an adult kind of thing.. an adult will nod and
smile and the toddler would try to impress his ass off.
Anonymous wrote:What is really rich?
Is it anyone over 100 million?
Anonymous wrote:How much interaction does your typical person in a rich suburb of the professional-managerial class (say a Chevy Chase or Greenwich) have with the "out of sight" rich?
And where would you draw the line between the "mass rich" and the really, really rich?