As someone there wrote, it's still your child after the divorce. You're still supposed to contribute to their life.
This is why the non-custodial parent cannot demand their child support money be used for certain things, or to give money directly to an older child (teenage or so) who could in theory manage their own funds. The money has already been spent by the custodial parent and they are simply being made whole with child support funds.
(I have heard of many cases where parents become unreasonably angry about not being able to dictate how child support money is spent, to the point of being censured by the judge. And similarly petty / spiteful behaviour e.g. parents quitting their jobs to try and reduce their child support obligation based on their income, and then promptly having the judge verbally tear strips off them - and not reduce the child support as it based off of their demonstrated, not current, earning capacity)
It doesn't really matter if both parties are obscenely rich and the child support will probably never matter in any meaningful sense. The custodial parent should still not be out-of-pocket due to the separation.
Family law is a wild place sometimes :)
I think it would be easier if we just admitted that child support is a punishment for not raising your kids. The government used to pay for it, but it was seen as parasitic, so we invented (Edit: expanded [1]) child support. I don't object to this policy, I just think that the "interest of the child" ends up following a bunch of mental gymnastics to ensure that practically all non-custodial parents pay (which again is fine).
1: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child_support_in_the_United_Sta...