> You are the one who said top 3% earner. I didn't mean it disparaging, but you were coming across as a bit "let them eat cake"
I can see why you would get that impression, but what do you want from me here? From my perspective I have worked very hard to get to this place
For context, I started out 15ish years ago making ~28k USD/year as a junior software dev. I suspect this is pretty low for most people on this forum, even as a junior?
Now I make ~98k USD as a senior software dev, 15 years later. I suspect that is much lower than "top 3% of earners in Canada" sounded like? Edit: For context this would 'only' put me in the top 13% of American earners. I suspect many people on this forum do much better than I do, and the top 3% of American earners make my income look like a joke
I don't think I fit the archetype of "rich guy posting online" that you have projected on me. I do really well for myself yes, within my country and within my context, but I'm not exactly the Bezos of Canada.
> most people concerned with identity because it's an everyday struggle to make identity fit reality and most people have way too much to lose to risk rocking the boat
It is way harder to make reality fit your identity than it is to modify your identity to fit reality
> Also telling how it is all past tense. you described a normal "middle class " childhood through the economic collapse of the 2000s
By strict definition it was lower class, not middle class. But yes, lower class in the 90s and 00s was much more comfortable than it is today, you're right about that
I guess we just have different definitions of "low class" your "starter job" at 28k would have been obscenely rich to me growing up with a single mother on disability with 4 kids making 12k a year and a 2000$ asset limit.
Completely separate from the 90s boom.
Again not to be rude but you very much ARE a rich guy posting online with rather decadent privilege going off how it's just people being fed "identity nonsense" is harmful to them.
It's is another common rich guy defense mechanism to say well since I'm not bezos himself it's fine! That doesn't really assuage my point at all.
I can see why you would get that impression, but what do you want from me here? From my perspective I have worked very hard to get to this place
For context, I started out 15ish years ago making ~28k USD/year as a junior software dev. I suspect this is pretty low for most people on this forum, even as a junior?
Now I make ~98k USD as a senior software dev, 15 years later. I suspect that is much lower than "top 3% of earners in Canada" sounded like? Edit: For context this would 'only' put me in the top 13% of American earners. I suspect many people on this forum do much better than I do, and the top 3% of American earners make my income look like a joke
I don't think I fit the archetype of "rich guy posting online" that you have projected on me. I do really well for myself yes, within my country and within my context, but I'm not exactly the Bezos of Canada.
> most people concerned with identity because it's an everyday struggle to make identity fit reality and most people have way too much to lose to risk rocking the boat
It is way harder to make reality fit your identity than it is to modify your identity to fit reality
> Also telling how it is all past tense. you described a normal "middle class " childhood through the economic collapse of the 2000s
By strict definition it was lower class, not middle class. But yes, lower class in the 90s and 00s was much more comfortable than it is today, you're right about that