[quote name='mykevermin']:lol:
"Choose your occupation wisely."
Thanks, Doctor Noshit (the authors, not you, Ma12kez).
Yes, there are huge differences between "income" and "wealth." But, in my view, anybody who earns more than 95-97% of all other Americans has no right whatsoever claiming they are middle class.
80-some-odd-% of Americans think of themselves as "middle class." Those making $25K a year, and those making $250K per year - middle class. Think of the disparity in terms of what you can afford at 250K - even living in javeryh's neighborhood - that you couldn't at 25K.
It's amazing to me that people aspire to BE rich, yet when they are, are in perpetual denial of it. I'm trying not to pick on you, javery, but your whole "we're not rich in my neighborhood" claim is kinda silly, since it sounds painfully obvious that you must be rich in order to gain entree into your nieghborhood - that is, if you weren't rich, you wouldn't be able to afford to live there at all, barely or easily. That's my argument.
Oh, right. Anyway, more than 80% of Americans think of themselves as middle class. I wonder if it's the same 80-some-odd-% that think of themselves as academically "above average."

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I think this is because we have two different definitions of "rich". Unless you are living in Newark or renting there aren't many places you can live in northern NJ outside NYC without falling into your definition of rich (leaving out for the sake of argument the lucky bastards who bought houses in the 80s before the skyrocketing prices - my next door neighbor is a 5th grade public school teacher!). Certainly
everyone around me can't be considered rich but they would be by your definition because I live in one of most expensive parts of the country. I wouldn't make nearly as much as I do though if I moved so it is all relative... I think. FWIW a quick check on realtor.com shows houses in my town going from $300,000 to $2,900,000. We're not all rich are we? Or are some just richer than others?
