I would actually suspect parents of a half blood (is there a name for this?) would be the weak link, rather than muggle-born children.
You’ve got people who have lived their whole lives as muggles, then suddenly they fall in love and get married and find out their spouse is a wizard. They’ve spent ~20 years in the muggle world and probably have a career of their own. No way they don’t ask their spouse to spend a couple hours and let them both live like kings for the rest of their lives. And if they don’t even get that much information about their other’s life, that’s some seriously messed up power dynamics in that household.
I’m thinking more “Go magic that banker and we’ll be rich.”
Or “Hey can you use that wicker spinmaster thingy to get us the lotto numbers?” I presume if the witch/wizard owned one they’d figure out what it does eventually. They’d have to after a long enough time living together.
I would actually suspect parents of a half blood (is there a name for this?) would be the weak link, rather than muggle-born children.
You’ve got people who have lived their whole lives as muggles, then suddenly they fall in love and get married and find out their spouse is a wizard. They’ve spent ~20 years in the muggle world and probably have a career of their own. No way they don’t ask their spouse to spend a couple hours and let them both live like kings for the rest of their lives. And if they don’t even get that much information about their other’s life, that’s some seriously messed up power dynamics in that household.
Pop quiz: What percentage of Muggles have ever heard the word “arbitrage”?
(Retracted because reply makes sense)
I’m thinking more “Go magic that banker and we’ll be rich.”
Or “Hey can you use that wicker spinmaster thingy to get us the lotto numbers?” I presume if the witch/wizard owned one they’d figure out what it does eventually. They’d have to after a long enough time living together.