>>3384636"Anon, get off the internet!"
"No! I'm almost ENJOYING my anger!"
Do what makes you happy and embrace what you're passionate about, but don't forget to experience tranquility from time to time as well.
Man, that's hard to determine. There are so many variables that go into child rearing that can have an effect on psychological growth and development even into adulthood. A lot of it would depend on the environment in which she is raised and what kind of value system the parents would impart onto her. Even in loving families, a life of privilege insulated from want, consequences or compromise can have a debilitating effect on one's ability to perceive and interact with the outside world and the people in it. "I don't understand. What do you mean you have to struggle to afford food? Just take out a loan." Even if her parents took genuine care and precautions in raising her, she could still grow up detached from the realities and struggles faced by ordinary people and have difficulty connecting with them. This doesn't necessarily have to manifest as criminality, but it could mutate into a very egocentric worldview if left unchecked (if you're so inclined, look up Ethan Couch for a real life case study of the worst-case scenario of this effect). I'm not saying anything is predetermined, but it's the duty of the parents to instill a responsible standard of ethics and behavior in the child. If they can do that, then great; but if the parents themselves are incapable of maintaining or communicating such a standard (whether due to behavioral, environmental or societal conditions), the child's development will bear that influence.
TLDR: It's possible, but that wouldn't be the only factor at work. In case you couldn't tell, this is actually a subject of some interest to me; my sister studies child development, and we're very close.