Welcome to the itsafetish circle! We document examples of fetishism (primarily autogynephilia) within the trans community and discuss implications from a feminist perspective! We typically use Blanchard's typology of transsexualism as our framework.
The Rules:
Mods may remove comments and posts at her own discretion to help ensure that this community is conducive to being women-centered and maintains a healthy amount of critical analysis & intellectual curiosity. The following rules are in addition to the site wide rules.
1. Be mindful of your words. Do not promote bigotry, encourage violence, or use dehumanizing language.
2. Keep posts on-topic and in spirit with the circle. Flair posts appropriately. Use archive links for social media posts.
3. Content involving or by minors is not allowed.
4. When linking to Google docs, put a warning in title, so that users know prior to clicking.
5. No explicit pornographic material.
6. Censor images that use real women without their consent. Take a generous approach regarding blurring / censoring people who are unrelated to the displays of fetishism.
I was gonna say, having lots of liquid cash on hand says “rich” to me. Having a high credit card balance you can’t pay every month says “poor”.
There's also often a difference between how generationally/long-term rich people versus temporarily rich people approach it; the former tend to be relatively understated and less conspicuous/flashy, live within their means, and always have an eye on where to cut costs, while people who have suddenly found themselves wealthy can very quickly and easily spend themselves into a very deep hole. Plus just the sheer number of rich people who could easily be busted for tax evasion in one form or another, whether employing/paying people for services under the table, accepting payments for things in cash, making huge purchases in cash without paying sales taxes, etc. Credit/transactions conducted through a bank are for things that are write-offs, or conspicuous (main income, real estate, etc.).
TLDR, 'real' rich people aren't just good at spending money, but at saving it. And one of the ways a lot of them save it unscrupulously is by cutting the government out of getting a cut of a lot of transactions, which tends to mean cash. More above board, it means not paying interest on credit card balances.