Prospector
Not a scaredy cat anymore
- Joined
- 18 January 2006
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At 55 I wouldn't rate Chris Evert a SWEET YOUNG THING maybe 30 years ago
Aha, which is why I said
But when he decides to try out a sweet younger thing, .
At 55 I wouldn't rate Chris Evert a SWEET YOUNG THING maybe 30 years ago
But when he decides to try out a sweet younger thing, .
I doubt it - we would share custody, so 50:50 it would be. And we would not waste money on lawyers
This raises an interesting question for me in the likes of Greg Norman. He and his wife were married for many many years and (most likely) when they married Greg Norman certainly wasnt the name he is now. They raised children together, and shared the highs and lows of their married life. But when he decides to try out a sweet younger thing, he is angry that he had to share (and not by half, either) his company, cars, houses and $$. Well, for mind, he should have given her half after all those years and he was the one who wanted out.
I don't agree with this at all.
Just because someone is married to another person that doesn't mean they are 50% responsible for all of their successes.
Each situation is different, but if one individuals exceptional talent or perserverence is the key reason for the wealth that was created then that person is entitled to a greater share of it in my view. I completely agree that acknowledgement needs to be given for the other partner providing love and support, and in the case of raising children then the effort involved in raising children and the ongoing responsibility all need to be accounted for in dividing up the finances - but it shouldn't be automatic that its a 50/50 split.
I also don't believe it makes sense to punish someone for wanting to leave a marriage that that they are unhappy in - who cares who decides to leave the relationship/marriage when it comes to dividing up the money. It takes two people to make an unhappy marriage just as much as it takes two people to make a happy one.
Don't see why people get so hung up about splitting assets like that.
without the 'assistance' and blessing and support of his (now ex) wife, he simply couldnt have done it!
I doubt it - we would share custody, so 50:50 it would be. And we would not waste money on lawyers
Why could he not have done it without the assistance and blessing of his wife?
There are plenty of single mothers out there with succesful careers that are doing it without the assistance and blessing or financial support of a husband.
she was in a marriage and she was raising their children
we are talking about contributions to the marriage, whether that be financial, emotional, physical.
And so were many other women, many of which received half of far, far smaller amounts.
And you think her raising the children and possible advice would likely have been worth half of his wealth? I strongly disagree with that. She may have been, but I don't think it is likely. I'm sure she helped, as most people do need support in some way, but half?
Prospector said:What single mothers do is irrelevant in a discussion about contributions to marriage and how that equates to financial distribution in the event of a breakdown.
.
In theory, even if Greg Norman had hired three full time nannies, a cleaner, a cook and a candlestick maker to wait on his wife hand and foot for the entire duration of his marriage, while she did nothing but lay on the lounge drinking champagne, watching daytime soapies and whinging to her friends about what a loser he was, she would still be entitled to half or more of the wealth generated during the marriage.
Liked that C/Fish , great point![]()
Suspect you look at it differently to me and Prospector. To me a marriage is a 50/50 partnership. Sure you work out who does what work including who does the most paid work, who does most unpaid work, who is primary carer for children etc etc, but this is just part of the partnership. Just like a business partnership, each brings different strengths, but it is 50/50.
Thus assets should go 50:50
It is an example whereby an individual can be both succesful in their career and also raise children without a partner or financial support.
So along the same lines, its equally reasonable to expect that Greg Norman in a hypothetical scenario could have raised children and managed a succesful golfing career without a partner or financial support.
In theory, even if Greg Norman had hired three full time nannies, a cleaner, a cook and a candlestick maker to wait on his wife hand and foot for the entire duration of his marriage, while she did nothing but lay on the lounge drinking champagne, watching daytime soapies and whinging to her friends about what a loser he was, she would still be entitled to half or more of the wealth generated during the marriage.
If that was the case, he should have filed for divorce earlier rather than continuing to expand his wealth prior to divorce!
Suspect you look at it differently to me and Prospector. To me a marriage is a 50/50 partnership. Sure you work out who does what work including who does the most paid work, who does most unpaid work, who is primary carer for children etc etc, but this is just part of the partnership. Just like a business partnership, each brings different strengths, but it is 50/50.
Thus assets should go 50:50
Prospector said:Except he didnt do that for her, yet he still complained, publically, bitterly, about how much he had to give her; and it wasn't half either!
I view financial contributions as independent of the marriage. Instead, I view them as part of a business relationship that allows the marriage to exist, but I would never count them as a part of marriage.
Are you talking in general or just extremely wealthy people who have housekeepers, gardeners, cleaners, nannies and the like. If you are talking about every marriage then I hope that your luckywife charges the going rate for cleaning (I think around $30 an hour) for everything she does for you, as well as cooking - hm, lets say $50 an hour plus overtime. Oh yeah, and pregnancy, 9 months at 24/7 plus childbirth, then there is payment for disability caused by pregnancy, the feeding, cleaning etc etc.
Add all these up and she may be entitled to far more than half your income.
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