Cancel 2016.11
Darla
“People who don’t have money don’t understand the stress,” said Alan Dlugash, a partner at accounting firm Marks Paneth & Shron LLP in New York who specializes in financial planning for the wealthy. “Could you imagine what it’s like to say I got three kids in private school, I have to think about pulling them out? How do you do that?”
I even get that on 350 thousand you can't do all of the things you may want to if you have a family and you are looking at second homes, etc. I just don't think it's anything that should elicit pity. But what stuns me is that even though I have zero life experience with this, I do know that there are parents who have to ask "how do you tell your children there's no Santa because there aren't going to be any presents this year at all"? Or, "how do you tell your children that you know they are still hungry, but that's all the food there is today." I don't know if it's because my dad was very poor Brooklyn Irish who had literally nothing, and who experienced both of those things when he was a kid and always impressed that upon us. He gave us so much better, eventually rising to be corporate VP of one of these very institutions on Wall St. But he never didn't get it. He was never one of these assholes. I am thankful.
To me, this guy? No longer really fully human. Once all you can see is you and yours, and you are seriously completely clueless about what "people who don't have money" go through (yeah they have no stress dude!), then you've lost something, or never had it. And I'd rather be poor than be missing that very essential component of being human.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-...rawal-means-trading-aspen-for-cheap-chex.html
I even get that on 350 thousand you can't do all of the things you may want to if you have a family and you are looking at second homes, etc. I just don't think it's anything that should elicit pity. But what stuns me is that even though I have zero life experience with this, I do know that there are parents who have to ask "how do you tell your children there's no Santa because there aren't going to be any presents this year at all"? Or, "how do you tell your children that you know they are still hungry, but that's all the food there is today." I don't know if it's because my dad was very poor Brooklyn Irish who had literally nothing, and who experienced both of those things when he was a kid and always impressed that upon us. He gave us so much better, eventually rising to be corporate VP of one of these very institutions on Wall St. But he never didn't get it. He was never one of these assholes. I am thankful.
To me, this guy? No longer really fully human. Once all you can see is you and yours, and you are seriously completely clueless about what "people who don't have money" go through (yeah they have no stress dude!), then you've lost something, or never had it. And I'd rather be poor than be missing that very essential component of being human.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-...rawal-means-trading-aspen-for-cheap-chex.html