Yes but you know what you are doing, you know how to use a DSLR and know what settings to use to get correct exposure, and know how to use the camera to do what you want as you're shooting with manual control,
where as a 'soccer mom' who goes to jessops and is talked into buying a 1000d- shoots it in auto but doesn't get the shots she wants, in iPhoto she corrects her images and her daughters hockey photos are saved
She only takes 100 shots a month, and has no deadlines to meet- she is in no danger of filling that 2tb hard drive the assistant from Comet assured her she would need
A working pro on the other hand takes 100 shots a day, and has to FTP them to his editor from his iphone in a field in Nottingham, and will likely delete/achive non personal/portfolio photos
Raw is for people who don't know how to shoot to get what they want
it's why I use it

(edit: this is a joke)
RAW is really for people who shoot what they wanted, then decided they wanted something different when they got home
(anotherjoke, sorry...)
I mostly shoot RAW because i'm still learning, and I look back on the personal images I took years ago as my own client and want to play with them some more, to experiment with new techniques I have picked up since then. The stuff I shot for an external client (unless it was portfolio standard) doesn't get the same treatment as there is no longer any requirement for the image to exist, and the image was either good enough at the time to be printed/uses or it was rejected