- #1
JohnSmith0909
- 12
- 1
How can marriage possibly be worth it? With the divorce rate being over 50 percent, people are more likely to have their marriages fail then not? Why get married if I'm more likely than not to loose hundreds of thousands of dollars in the process? Make sure you marry the right person? Well at least in theory, I'd like to hope at least, that most people who get married think they have found the right person, and want to be married to them.
Don't think of marriage as and chance of failure a probability that you have no control over? Why not? With no fault divorce, your significant other can just wake up one day and want a divorce at no fault of your own. You have to rely on someone else to have a successful marriage so it's not in your hands at all. I agree that if someone doesn't want to be married to someone, then they should be able to get a divorce at no fault to the other person and not forced to be married to them.
However, I disagree that it is ok for someone to loose hundreds of thousands of dollars at no fault of their own. How can anyone honestly believe that is ok? It gets even worse if you have kids and you may get screwed over with visitation rights and barley even get to see YOUR kid.
Would you enter a business deal that was more likely to fail than not, and if failed you would loose half, maybe even more, of your net worth? Would you enter a car that had a 50 percent chance of failure?
Marry for love not money! Agree completely. However, you must consider the ramifications of a failed marriage and loosing hundreds of thousands of dollars. Unfortunatley loosing so much of your net worth is catistrophic, to not worry about it, especially sense it's more likely to happen then not, then it would be foolish to not consider what impact it would have on your financial life
Please enlighten me. I don't see the 52 percent probability of taking on the financial risk of loosing half your net worth, maybe even more, worth it. If you remove marriage from it and use something else that had the same probability of failure and the consequence of loading so much of your net worth, an idiot would take on that risk! It would be similar to investing all of my networth into a single stock, which has a 52 percent chance of decreasing in value by half. Only a fool would do such a thing.
Don't think of marriage as and chance of failure a probability that you have no control over? Why not? With no fault divorce, your significant other can just wake up one day and want a divorce at no fault of your own. You have to rely on someone else to have a successful marriage so it's not in your hands at all. I agree that if someone doesn't want to be married to someone, then they should be able to get a divorce at no fault to the other person and not forced to be married to them.
However, I disagree that it is ok for someone to loose hundreds of thousands of dollars at no fault of their own. How can anyone honestly believe that is ok? It gets even worse if you have kids and you may get screwed over with visitation rights and barley even get to see YOUR kid.
Would you enter a business deal that was more likely to fail than not, and if failed you would loose half, maybe even more, of your net worth? Would you enter a car that had a 50 percent chance of failure?
Marry for love not money! Agree completely. However, you must consider the ramifications of a failed marriage and loosing hundreds of thousands of dollars. Unfortunatley loosing so much of your net worth is catistrophic, to not worry about it, especially sense it's more likely to happen then not, then it would be foolish to not consider what impact it would have on your financial life
Please enlighten me. I don't see the 52 percent probability of taking on the financial risk of loosing half your net worth, maybe even more, worth it. If you remove marriage from it and use something else that had the same probability of failure and the consequence of loading so much of your net worth, an idiot would take on that risk! It would be similar to investing all of my networth into a single stock, which has a 52 percent chance of decreasing in value by half. Only a fool would do such a thing.
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