Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I come from old southern money. Cotton on my daddy's side. Lumber on my mother's. My parents have a beautiful home, but certainly nothing enormous. My mother drives a nice but not flashy car. My daddy has a truck. They travel quite a bit and give a ton of money to their church. Families in the south with old money don't talk about it. Ever. Everyone knows we have money because of our name. It would never, ever be the topic of conversation. If you met my parents in D.C. you would have no idea they had money. That's just the way they are.
The majority of students at Ole Miss- you know, the college dcum loves to put down - have more money than you could possibly imagine. Especially the ones from the Delta. Rich kids in Mississippi have no interest in going to an Ivy no matter how great their SATs and grades. They go to Ole Miss.
No one who knows me in Fairfax has any idea how wealthy my family is. I was raised never to discuss money...except on an anonymous internet board
Wow, very interesting. Do you think you could give us a ballpark figure of what kind of net worth your family has? Or what kind of net worth the "more money than you could imagine" Ole Miss folks have? Because I find it hard to imagine anyone in Mississippi having more than, say, $10 M...just because there doesn't seem to be a very healthy economy in that state and everything is so cheap. But I'm open to hearing otherwise!
Anonymous wrote:According to Forbes, 37 billionaires live in Texas. Micheal Dell leads the list at 17+ billion. That doesn't count the poor nine-figure folks. The fracking boom has been led by hundreds of independent oil companies. Texas is awash in serious money.
I went to one of the schools you mentioned. I had sorority sisters who shopped for their clothes at Paris fashion week. Yes, it is "new" money, but there LOTS of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I come from old southern money. Cotton on my daddy's side. Lumber on my mother's. My parents have a beautiful home, but certainly nothing enormous. My mother drives a nice but not flashy car. My daddy has a truck. They travel quite a bit and give a ton of money to their church. Families in the south with old money don't talk about it. Ever. Everyone knows we have money because of our name. It would never, ever be the topic of conversation. If you met my parents in D.C. you would have no idea they had money. That's just the way they are.
The majority of students at Ole Miss- you know, the college dcum loves to put down - have more money than you could possibly imagine. Especially the ones from the Delta. Rich kids in Mississippi have no interest in going to an Ivy no matter how great their SATs and grades. They go to Ole Miss.
No one who knows me in Fairfax has any idea how wealthy my family is. I was raised never to discuss money...except on an anonymous internet board
Braggy, braggy, braggy. And can you hear yourself? You seem pretty pleased at your family wealth, as though it means your family was necessarily good people.
No...she really doesn't. God what is with these sad DCUM trolls?
I discovered this thread and have been enthralled by it. More stories please!
She does sound braggy, and PP is not a troll. One is not a troll merely for disagreeing mildly. It is a fascinating thread, I agree, but it plays further into the (inexplicable) Southern sense of supremacy. Many families, Northern and Southern alike, have immense wealth and no one talks about it. It's pretty much universal good breeding not to talk about money, and especially so since I think most wealthy people, especially when it's old family money - again, North or South - are cognizant that their money was made on the backs of slaves, figuratively or literally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I come from old southern money. Cotton on my daddy's side. Lumber on my mother's. My parents have a beautiful home, but certainly nothing enormous. My mother drives a nice but not flashy car. My daddy has a truck. They travel quite a bit and give a ton of money to their church. Families in the south with old money don't talk about it. Ever. Everyone knows we have money because of our name. It would never, ever be the topic of conversation. If you met my parents in D.C. you would have no idea they had money. That's just the way they are.
The majority of students at Ole Miss- you know, the college dcum loves to put down - have more money than you could possibly imagine. Especially the ones from the Delta. Rich kids in Mississippi have no interest in going to an Ivy no matter how great their SATs and grades. They go to Ole Miss.
No one who knows me in Fairfax has any idea how wealthy my family is. I was raised never to discuss money...except on an anonymous internet board
Braggy, braggy, braggy. And can you hear yourself? You seem pretty pleased at your family wealth, as though it means your family was necessarily good people.
No...she really doesn't. God what is with these sad DCUM trolls?
I discovered this thread and have been enthralled by it. More stories please!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a big distinction between Texas wealth vs old money wealth in charleston, Nola, etc.
And even more important in Charleston is your ancestry. You could be poor and a member of the St. Cecelia Society, and the millionaires couldn't get in to save their lives.
Changing now - now that the i-bankers have turned Charleston into a resort. As evidenced by that stupid "Southern Charm" show. Thomas Ravenel is the only one of those morons who is old Charleston. And most of old Charleston has disavowed him for doing the show.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I come from old southern money. Cotton on my daddy's side. Lumber on my mother's. My parents have a beautiful home, but certainly nothing enormous. My mother drives a nice but not flashy car. My daddy has a truck. They travel quite a bit and give a ton of money to their church. Families in the south with old money don't talk about it. Ever. Everyone knows we have money because of our name. It would never, ever be the topic of conversation. If you met my parents in D.C. you would have no idea they had money. That's just the way they are.
The majority of students at Ole Miss- you know, the college dcum loves to put down - have more money than you could possibly imagine. Especially the ones from the Delta. Rich kids in Mississippi have no interest in going to an Ivy no matter how great their SATs and grades. They go to Ole Miss.
No one who knows me in Fairfax has any idea how wealthy my family is. I was raised never to discuss money...except on an anonymous internet board
Braggy, braggy, braggy. And can you hear yourself? You seem pretty pleased at your family wealth, as though it means your family was necessarily good people.
Anonymous wrote:I come from old southern money. Cotton on my daddy's side. Lumber on my mother's. My parents have a beautiful home, but certainly nothing enormous. My mother drives a nice but not flashy car. My daddy has a truck. They travel quite a bit and give a ton of money to their church. Families in the south with old money don't talk about it. Ever. Everyone knows we have money because of our name. It would never, ever be the topic of conversation. If you met my parents in D.C. you would have no idea they had money. That's just the way they are.
The majority of students at Ole Miss- you know, the college dcum loves to put down - have more money than you could possibly imagine. Especially the ones from the Delta. Rich kids in Mississippi have no interest in going to an Ivy no matter how great their SATs and grades. They go to Ole Miss.
No one who knows me in Fairfax has any idea how wealthy my family is. I was raised never to discuss money...except on an anonymous internet board
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I come from old southern money. Cotton on my daddy's side. Lumber on my mother's. My parents have a beautiful home, but certainly nothing enormous. My mother drives a nice but not flashy car. My daddy has a truck. They travel quite a bit and give a ton of money to their church. Families in the south with old money don't talk about it. Ever. Everyone knows we have money because of our name. It would never, ever be the topic of conversation. If you met my parents in D.C. you would have no idea they had money. That's just the way they are.
The majority of students at Ole Miss- you know, the college dcum loves to put down - have more money than you could possibly imagine. Especially the ones from the Delta. Rich kids in Mississippi have no interest in going to an Ivy no matter how great their SATs and grades. They go to Ole Miss.
No one who knows me in Fairfax has any idea how wealthy my family is. I was raised never to discuss money...except on an anonymous internet board
Wow, very interesting. Do you think you could give us a ballpark figure of what kind of net worth your family has? Or what kind of net worth the "more money than you could imagine" Ole Miss folks have? Because I find it hard to imagine anyone in Mississippi having more than, say, $10 M...just because there doesn't seem to be a very healthy economy in that state and everything is so cheap. But I'm open to hearing otherwise!
Anonymous wrote:I come from old southern money. Cotton on my daddy's side. Lumber on my mother's. My parents have a beautiful home, but certainly nothing enormous. My mother drives a nice but not flashy car. My daddy has a truck. They travel quite a bit and give a ton of money to their church. Families in the south with old money don't talk about it. Ever. Everyone knows we have money because of our name. It would never, ever be the topic of conversation. If you met my parents in D.C. you would have no idea they had money. That's just the way they are.
The majority of students at Ole Miss- you know, the college dcum loves to put down - have more money than you could possibly imagine. Especially the ones from the Delta. Rich kids in Mississippi have no interest in going to an Ivy no matter how great their SATs and grades. They go to Ole Miss.
No one who knows me in Fairfax has any idea how wealthy my family is. I was raised never to discuss money...except on an anonymous internet board
Anonymous wrote:how does wealth in places like Nashville and New Orleans compare to Texas? And in Nashville is every rich person connected to the music industry?