wizards8507
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Of course. I was never suggesting a linear relationship, especially at the extreme ends of the distribution. I don't encounter the uber wealthy very often (if ever), so I wasn't even including folks like your high net worth clients in my calculus. My point was more about poverty being a potential red flag for something bad than wealth serving as a proxy for anything good.You just can't safely use class as a proxy for virtue. I've mentioned this before, but as an estate planning attorney, the richer the client, the more f*cked up their kids are.
Jeeze, that's insane and definitely not "a thing" among my coworkers. Most parents here seem to agree that the appropriate time to get a plain old non-smart cell phone is during middle school when after-school activities start, with a smartphone coming much later if at all.At those ages, a good rule of thumb I've found for whether or not I can trust another set of parents with one of my kids for a playdate is, "Does their kid have a smart phone?" If yes, they're either clueless or negligent about what their kid is likely looking at online, which is a huge red flag. And in my experience, the parents who do that are usually both working and producing a high household income.
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