1/ Frank Rich has his major articles every six weeks or so, and this is his latest - an analysis of the news media, what has happened to the once proud newspaper industry and where we are going in the future.
It's an uncertain time for the print media.....
his spring marks the tenth anniversary of a journalistic scandal that everyone would like to forget, and that many have. On May 11, 2003, an unsuspecting Sunday Times readership woke up to a page-one headline heralding a four-page investigation of one Jayson Blair, a 27-year-old reporter whose serial fabrications and plagiarism constituted what the publisher, Arthur Sulzberger Jr., called “a low point” in the history of America’s greatest newspaper. Even at the time, Blair, a third-tier neophyte in a post-9/11 newsroom, was a bit player in the conflagration engulfing the Times. But his misdeeds exposed a larger breakdown: The same management culture that let Blair run amok on mostly minor assignments also allowed, even encouraged, Judith Miller (among others) to hijack the Times’s credibility and sometimes its front page to bolster the Bush administration’s spurious evidence for Saddam Hussein’s nonexistent weapons of mass destruction. The failure of theTimes—and of virtually every mainstream news organization, including every broadcast-network news division—to vet the case for the Iraq War remains one of the worst systemic failures in the history of American journalism. TheTimes, above all, was expected to outperform the pack.
In the paper’s besieged and airless old 43rd Street building during the Blair imbroglio, the mood was grim. As one editor, a Times lifer and loyalist, put it to me in a desultory conversation one afternoon, “You can work for a century to build up an institution like this, and it can still be torn down in a weekend.”
A remarkable thing happened on the Times’ way to demolition, however. A clean slate of leaders, uncharacteristically humble circumspection, hard work, and a new regimen of checks and balances restored the paper’s internal equilibrium and external reputation. That’s not to say the Times is perfect; no news organization has been or ever will be. (To keep some perspective here, it’s worth remembering that another of the Times’ low points was its minimalist coverage of the Holocaust.) But the paper has reclaimed its status as the most essential American news source—one of the last still fielding ambitious correspondents in most places where news is made, and still investing untold man-hours, serious investigative talent, and acres of paragraphs to enterprise reportage that spans the globe and nearly every field of human endeavor. If theTimes didn’t provide a daily crib sheet, American television news wouldn’t know how to fill its airtime, and politicians wouldn’t know what authority to cite or, on the right, to tar and feather.
2/ A passionate essay by Carl Gibson about the President and how he is just another corporate puppet, and although I don't totally agree with his central point there are enough truths in his article for us all to be worried......especially the fact that Obama has put Social Security on the table for potential cuts......
We report, you decide........
President Barack Obama in Tucson, Arizona, 01/12/11 (Photo: Jewel Samad/Getty Images)
This year, the New Deal turned 80. And those same New Deal programs championed by FDR, a Democrat, defined the bedrock of the American left political achievements for all others who would seek the presidency. Now, the corporate takeover of our government has proven that those New Deal programs can be slowly dismantled by a Democrat president, as the Obama administration fully digs its heels in on an austerity agenda.
He's not the one running the show, but rather, his strings are being pulled by Wall Street bankers and hedge fund managers like Pete Peterson , who is most of the wallet behind the corporate-funded "Fix the Debt" sham campaign. Even one of Fix the Debt's key spokesmen admitted that their goal was to create an " artificial crisis " that would justify gutting Social Security.
Jack Lew, Obama's Treasury secretary, is leading the administration's doublespeak on austerity. In Europe, he's told political leaders to lighten up on austerity measures. But in America, Lew is telling Congress to endorse President Obama's proposals to cut earned benefits for vulnerable Americans who need them to survive, even though Social Security doesn't contribute to the deficit. Lew is also a pawn of the corporate and financial string-pullers, coming from Citigroup before his years in the Clinton administration's division of budget. He was even guaranteed a bonus by Citigroup if he was able to secure a "high-level" federal job.
The corporations running our government want our public resources, too. The White House is currently mulling a proposal to sell off the Tennessee Valley Authority, which FDR's New Deal established as the nation's largest publicly-owned power company. Privatization of public resources is one of the key austerity measures being forced by the European Union right now, particularly in scorched-earth economies like Greece and Spain. Privatization of public resources, the selling-off of a public good for corporate profit, means that the people who depended on that service are usually subject to frequent price gouging, while under the thumb of an unaccountable private corporation.
Jack Lew, Obama's Treasury secretary, is leading the administration's doublespeak on austerity. In Europe, he's told political leaders to lighten up on austerity measures. But in America, Lew is telling Congress to endorse President Obama's proposals to cut earned benefits for vulnerable Americans who need them to survive, even though Social Security doesn't contribute to the deficit. Lew is also a pawn of the corporate and financial string-pullers, coming from Citigroup before his years in the Clinton administration's division of budget. He was even guaranteed a bonus by Citigroup if he was able to secure a "high-level" federal job.
The corporations running our government want our public resources, too. The White House is currently mulling a proposal to sell off the Tennessee Valley Authority, which FDR's New Deal established as the nation's largest publicly-owned power company. Privatization of public resources is one of the key austerity measures being forced by the European Union right now, particularly in scorched-earth economies like Greece and Spain. Privatization of public resources, the selling-off of a public good for corporate profit, means that the people who depended on that service are usually subject to frequent price gouging, while under the thumb of an unaccountable private corporation.
3/ A beautiful five minute video - Birds Of Paradise of New Guinea. This is a unique record of these rare and seldom photographed birds, shot under very difficult conditions over a period of years......
4/ Whoa, I didn't know this. Tennessee has become the Tea Party dream, a state where they are putting the Ayn Rand vision into practice - screw the poor and starve the gumment.....
Want to know what life will be like if the Rand Paul's of the world take over? Move to Tennessee.....
If you’re worried about where America is heading, look no further than Tennessee. Its lush mountains and verdant rolling countryside belie a mean-spirited public policy that only makes sense if you believe deeply in the anti-collectivist, anti-altruist philosophy of Ayn Rand. It’s what you get when you combine hatred for government with disgust for poor people.
Tennessee starves what little government it has, ranking dead last in per capita tax revenue. To fund its minimalist public sector, it makes sure that low-income residents pay as much as possible through heavily regressive sales taxes, which rank 10th highest among all states as a percent of total tax revenues. (For more detailed data see here.)
As you would expect, this translates into hard times for its public school systems, which rank 48th in school revenues per student and 45th in teacher salaries. The failure to invest in education also corresponds with poverty: the state has the 40th worst poverty rate (15%) and the 13th highest state percentage of poor children (26%).
Employment opportunities also are extremely poor for the poor. Only 25% have full-time jobs, 45% are employed part-time, and a whopping 30% have no jobs at all.
So what do you do with all those low-income folks who don’t have decent jobs? You put a good number of them in jail. In fact, only Louisiana, Georgia and New Mexico have higher jail incarceration rates.
From the perspective of Tennessee legislators, it’s all about providing the proper incentives to motivate the poor. For starters, you make sure that no one could possible live on welfare payments (TANF: Temporary Assistance to Needy Families). Although President Clinton’s welfare reform program curtailed how long a family can receive welfare (60 months) and dramatically increased the work requirements, Tennessee set the maximum family welfare payment at only $185 per month. (That’s how much a top hedge fund manager makes in under one second.) As a result, the Volunteer State ranks 49th in TANF, just above Mississippi ($170).
No apologies for putting this in again......powerful!
5/ French DJ David Guetta is one of the worlds top musicians, and he has made this mysterious video about a she-wolf, called "Falling To Pieces".....visually spectacular, shot in Iceland and quite different.....
The video starts off with a shot of a naked woman, then it moves on to a wounded wolf running from a handful of human hunters. It is shown that the wolf is supernatural, as it is able to make the hunters "explode" on every breakdown of the song. The "explosions" depict the hunters and the landscape as composed by tiny polygons, as if everything were part of a computer simulated reality. At the end of the music video, the canine then transforms back into the naked woman at the end, indicating that she is a werewolf, referring to the song title. Meanwhile, the blood on the snow uncovers beats from the song. This is the second time that neither Guetta nor Sia make an appearance in the video.
6/ Coming this summer - "World War Z" with Brad Pitt, which will be the most expensive zombie movie ever made, which is of course good.
Per the trailer the zombies are the fast moving kind ["28 Days Later"] not the shuffling, easily killable ones [The Walking Dead].....
Will be interesting!
7/ Steven Colbert recently interviewed Bill Clinton and took up his whole show doing it in front of a live audience. This is the full 21 minute segment with Steven in rare form, and Big Bill warming up towards the middle....
You may have seen the last three minutes, where Colbert teaches Clinton how to tweet......
For fans of either man......
8/ This is a critique of the plan President Obama just offered to Republicans to slow down the growth of Social Security by reducing benefits for the elderly.....of course that's not the spin they put on it, but here are the facts.....
The “chained CPI” proposal in President Obama’s budget continues to draw much-deserved fire, which is only likely to increase as more information about it becomes known.
Here are ten embarrassing facts about the chained CPI which the White House and its defenders would prefer to see overlooked:
1. Of course it’s a benefit cut.
Chained-CPI defenders say it’s not a benefit cut, just a slowdown in the rate of the benefit’s planned increases. That’s a silly semantic game unworthy of serious leaders or analysts. The Social Security benefit, as laid out on the Social Security Administration’s website, includes adjustments designed to keep pace with the rising cost of living.
Those adjustments aren’t a benefit increase. They’re designed to prevent the benefit from being decreased as a result of inflation. If you lower that adjustment, you’re cutting benefits. Period.
2. Of course it’s a tax hike.
Same goes for the tax impact of the chained CPI. Our tax brackets were designed to make sure that taxes didn’t go up inadvertently because inflation kicked them into a higher tax bracket. That was done to make sure that people who weren’t earning more in real dollars – which includes many (if not most) of the “99 percent” – weren’t hit with an unearned tax hike.
The President has repeatedly promised that there will be no middle-class tax hikes while he’s President.
If you substitute the chained CPI for the current formula, as the President has proposed, people will be kicked into higher tax brackets earlier. Then they’ll pay more in taxes, even if they’re not making any more “real” money.
That’s a tax hike.
3. And it’s a tax hike for everybody but the wealthy.
In fact, it’s a tax hike on all but the highest levels of income. The richest earnings won’t be affected because they’re already in the highest tax bracket
9/ OK OK.....I hear your whining "how come you never put in funny animal videos"?
Here is a funny one minute dog one......and stop pestering me.....
10/ For all of you cruise afficionados Royal Caribbean is introducing their newest ship "Quantum of the Seas" in 2014, so they have unveiled some of the details of the 160,000 ton beast with an 8 minute video featuring the annoying Kristin Chenoweth [who?], who will be the Godmother. The ship appears to have some very cool stuff, including bumper cars and what looks like a huge crane boom that rises above the decks.
RCCL has a definite style for these unveilings - a little coy, informal and fun featuring the senior management doing goofy things and this video fits the mould. The Chairman Richard Fain rides the skydiving simulator, and the President Adam Goldstein plays ping pong with Kristin.
I remember when I worked there there was a permanent battle between the Entertainment division and the Onboard Revenue departments for physical space, features and programming, but that seems to have ended with this ship - it's entertainment time folks. In the coming months I certainly hope they remember to mention the dining options and show not just the supersuite for the 0.1%, the most expensive cabin.......[reflecting society perhaps?].
Anyway here is the video.....and ignore the Chenoweth voice......
Your Health
Part of the mission of DDD is to inform busy people about good things they don't have the time to look for, and bad stuff you may not be aware of.
In the culinary area there is more and more evidence that Big Food and Big Ag are producing food and packaged meals that are not just bad for you, but give you diseases and screw up your health. Here are three articles that will curl your hair.......
11/ Corn - I am never eating GM corn again after reading this......
Is GMO corn nutritionally equivalent to non-GMO corn? Monsanto will tell you the answer is a big ‘yes’, but the real answer is absolutely not. And the simple reality is that they are continuing to get away with their blatant misinformation. In fact, a 2012 nutritional analysis of genetically modified corn found that not only is GM corn lacking in vitamins and nutrients when compared to non-GM corn, but the genetic creation also poses numerous health risks due to extreme toxicity.
With the recent passing of the Monsanto Protection Act, there is no question that mega corporations like Monsanto are able to wield enough power to even surpass that of the United States government. The new legislation provides Monsanto with a legal safeguard against federal courts striking down any pending review of dangerous GM crops. It is ironic to see the passing of such a bill in the face of continuous releases of GMO dangers.
Non-GMO Corn 20x Richer in Nutrition than GMO Corn
The 2012 report, entitled 2012 Nutritional Analysis: Comparison of GMO Corn versus Non-GMO Corn, found numerous concerning and notable differences between GMO and non-GMO corn, none of which are particularly surprising. First, the report found that non-GMO corn has considerably more calcium, magnesium, manganese, potassium, iron, and zinc.
.............................. ..
GMO Corn Also Found to be Highly Toxic
Not surprisingly, the report found what many of us already know – that GMO corn is highly toxic. While non-GMO corn was found to be free of chlorides, formaldehyde, glyphosate (active ingredient in Monsanto’s best selling herbicide Roundup), and other toxic substances, GMO corn is riddled with these toxins.
Based on the Environmental Protection Agency’s regulations, the maximum amount of glyphosate allowed in drinking water is 700 parts per billion, which equates to .7 ppm. The amount is a set “level of protection based on the best available science to prevent potential health problems”. Europe allows even less glyphosate in water, at .2 ppm. The report found that GMO corn contains 13 ppm – that’s 18.5x the “safe amount” set by the EPA.
Similarly, GMO corn contains concerning levels of toxic formaldehyde, at 200 ppm. According to Dr. Don Huber, a respected expert on GMOs, at least one study found that 0.97 ppm of ingested formaldehyde was toxic to animals. The GMO corn was found to contain 200 times more formaldehyde than this ‘maximum’ safety amount.
12/ This is a long but fascinating article from the Times Magazine detailing how the big food companies research how to make their packaged meals and other junk food addictive. If you eat these kinds of products you owe it to yourself to know what they are doing to you.....if you eat mostly fresh foods, read this to find out how smart you are.....
It's a long read, but excellently done.......
The Extraordinary Science of Addictive Junk Food
Grant Cornett for The New York Times
By MICHAEL MOSS
Published: February 20, 2013 1347 Comments
James Behnke, a 55-year-old executive at Pillsbury, greeted the men as they arrived. He was anxious but also hopeful about the plan that he and a few other food-company executives had devised to engage the C.E.O.’s on America’s growing weight problem. “We were very concerned, and rightfully so, that obesity was becoming a major issue,” Behnke recalled. “People were starting to talk about sugar taxes, and there was a lot of pressure on food companies.” Getting the company chiefs in the same room to talk about anything, much less a sensitive issue like this, was a tricky business, so Behnke and his fellow organizers had scripted the meeting carefully, honing the message to its barest essentials. “C.E.O.’s in the food industry are typically not technical guys, and they’re uncomfortable going to meetings where technical people talk in technical terms about technical things,” Behnke said. “They don’t want to be embarrassed. They don’t want to make commitments. They want to maintain their aloofness and autonomy.”
It just goes on and on.......
13/ As well as all of the other bad stuff drinking soda does to your body, for men having one soda a day will give you 40% more chance of getting prostate cancer......
The study is from a Swedish University - any school in the US that took on Big Food would be defunded......
Soda is quite possibly the most vilified food/beverage on the market, and for good reason. The beverage offers zero nutritional value, all while increasing the risk of countless diseases. But even with everything we know as a society, soda sales continue upward, and so do the number of studies showcasing the negative effects of the popular drink. According to one recent study, consuming about 1 soda per day increases a man’s risk of prostate cancer by 40% compared to someone who never touches the beverage.
The Swedish study, coming from Lund University and recently published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, focused on the associations between carbohydrates and their food sources in regards to prostate cancer risk. The researchers followed 8,128 men ages 45-73 for an average of 15 years. All were reported to be in good health.
Overall, it was found that fast-releasing carbohydrates and sugary drinks increased the risk of the most aggressive forms of prostate cancer. But for soda specifically, the researchers found that men who drank 300ml of soda each day (slightly less than one can) were more likely to develop the type of prostate cancer which required treatment. Lead researcher Dr. Isabel Drake commented by saying ”among the men who drank a lot of soft drinks or other drinks with added sugar, we saw an increased risk of prostate cancer of around 40 percent.
14/ What are "the young" watching now? Since you have no idea, let the Times give you a clue - Jenna Marbles. Her site is one of the first billion click YouTube views .....
She begins her tutorial by wielding that totem of collegiate binge drinking everywhere: a red plastic Solo Cup. One jump cut later (after a “Law and Order: S.V.U.” drinking game), she re-emerges, thoroughly intoxicated. She misapplies a gob of glue. It dangles from a false eyelash. She lines her lips with a black pencil.
“It doesn’t matter what color it is, ’cause you’re gonna blend it,” she slurs, batting her eye glue. “Don’t let this scare you.”
The video, titled “Drunk Makeup Tutorial,” is completely awesome to some, bewildering to others — and above all, classic Jenna Marbles, another installment from a reigning queen of YouTube. The episode has been viewed 14.6 million times.
While few people older than 30 probably know who Jenna Marbles is, her popularity is unquestioned among teenage girls who live on the Internet. She has more Facebook fans than Jennifer Lawrence, more Twitter followers than Fox News and more Instagram friends than Oprah. Her weekly videos on topics as quotidian as “What Girls Do in the Bathroom in the Morning,” “My Favorite Dance Moves” and “I Hate Being a Grown Up,” place her in an elite club of more than one billion YouTube views, with more than eight million subscribers and growing.
Jenna Marbles with "How to Trick People into Thinking You're Goodlooking"....this is one of her original ones, with 50 million hits.....3 minutes....
This is from last week "How Guys Fall Asleep".....only 2 1/2 million hits on this one.....2 minutes.....
Angry White Republicans Time
15/ The latest from our very own mental institution, the Florida House of Representatives. They hate the poor and don't want them healthy.....
TALLAHASSEE —
A House panel approved a health coverage plan Monday that shuns billions of dollars in federal aid available for low-income Floridians, while also sharply dividing the state’s Republican leaders.
The House proposal would cover 115,000 uninsured, low-income Florida parents, children and the disabled. It would cost state taxpayers $237 million annually.
But the House approach pales compared to a sweeping plan advanced by the Senate and backed by Gov. Rick Scott. With the Legislature entering its final scheduled three weeks, the standoff looms as the session’s decisive policy clash — one whose outcome remains much in doubt.
While the fight splits ruling Republicans, Democrats fired most of the shots Monday at the House proposal.
“It’s so woefully short of what needs to be done for the state of Florida,” said Rep. Dwight Dudley, D-St. Petersburg.
House Democratic Leader Perry Thurston of Fort Lauderdale condemned the plan as “inadequate and insufficient to say the least.”
But House Republicans closed ranks, saying that to rely on a continuing stream of federal dollars would eventually leave the state holding the bag. The proposal cleared a House committee working on the Affordable Care Act on an 11-6 partyline vote.
“There’s no free money,” said Rep. Ken Roberson, R-Punta Gorda. “Every dollar that comes down from Washington comes with all kinds of strings attached.”
Roberson said it was wise to reject the federal money. The House plan’s advantage was clear, he said.
16/ How to do business in Florida. If at first you don't get what you want, hire a lobbyist......
Note the key backer in this story of blatant corruption overwhelming a lone official with integrity - for you conspiracy freaks the money behind it all is from the Carlyle Group.....
There is some small consolation in this tale of corruption and big bucks overwhelming the public good - at least we have some of the judiciary who stand up to the politicians.
A judge has ruled that the state Department of Environmental Protection was wrong to ignore its top wetlands expert and issue a permit for a controversial project that she had warned would damage the environment.
The ruling shows "good science is being protected," said Tom Reese, the St. Petersburg attorney for the Florida Wildlife Federation, which challenged the permit.
The permit the DEP issued would have resulted in the loss of 300 acres of wetlands, considered vital to soaking up floodwaters and recharging the aquifer, he said.
The 83-page ruling concerns a permit the DEP issued for the Highlands Ranch Mitigation Bank in Clay County, a project so controversial it led to the suspension of the DEP's top wetlands expert, Connie Bersok.
Highlands Ranch's plans call for turning a North Florida pine plantation into a business that attempts to make up for wetlands that are wiped out by new roads and development. At stake: millions of dollars in wetland credits that can be sold to government and developers.
The problem, according to a memo last year from Bersok, was that the owners wanted the DEP to give them lots of wetland credits for land that isn't wet, using a method that no one else used.
After being told by Deputy Secretary Jeff Littlejohn to ignore the rules she had followed on other permits, Bersok wrote, "I hereby state my objection to the intended agency action and refusal to recommend this permit for issuance."
Bersok was put on leave and under the microscope. Documents from the investigation that followed show her bosses were worried she was blabbing to reporters and environmental activists about the permit. She testified under oath that she was not.
Although Bersok was reinstated, she was taken off the Highlands Ranch permit review. DEP officials approved the permit the way the owner wanted. During the environmental group's legal challenge, Bersok's testimony about what happened offered "the most credible and reliable application of reasonable scientific judgment," the judge ruled.
Todays video - the diner scene from "Five Easy Pieces", with Jack Nicholson in his full glory.....this made him a star......
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Todays parenting jokes
Q. Will I love my dog less when the baby is born?
A. No, but your husband might get on your nerves.
Q. Under what circumstances can sex at the end of pregnancy bring
on labor?
A. When the sex is between your husband and another woman.
Q. What's the difference between a nine-months pregnant woman and
a Playboy centerfold?
A. Nothing, if the pregnant woman's husband knows what's good for him.
Q. My childbirth instructor says it's not pain I'll feel during
labor, but pressure. Is she right?
A. Yes, in the same way that a tornado might be called an air current.
Q. When is the best time to get an epidural?
A. Right after you find out you're pregnant.
Q. Is there any reason I have to be in the delivery room while my
wife is in labor?
A. Not unless the word "alimony" means anything to you.
Q. I'm modest. Once I'm in the hospital to deliver, who will see
me in that delicate position?
A. Authorized personnel only -- doctors, nurses, oderlies, photographers,
florists, cleaning crews, journalists, etc.
Q. Does labor cause hemorrhoids?
A. Labor causes anything you want to blame it for.
Q. Where is the best place to store breast milk?
A. In your breasts.
Q. Is there a safe alternative to breast pumps?
A. Yes, baby lips.
Q. What does it mean when a baby is born with teeth?
A. It means that the baby's mother may want to rethink her plans to nurse.
Q. How does one sanitize nipples?
A. Bathe daily and wear a clean bra. It beats boiling them in a saucepan.
Q. What are the terrible twos?
A. Your breasts after baby stops nursing cold turkey.
Q. What is the best time to wean the baby from nursing?
A. When you see teeth marks.
Q. What is the grasp reflex?
A. The reaction of new fathers when they see a new mother's breasts.
Q. Can a mother get pregnant while nursing?
A. Yes, but it's much easier if she removes the baby from her breast and
puts him to sleep first.
Q. What happens to disposable diapers after they're thrown away?
A. They are stored in a silo in the Midwest, in the event of global
chemical warfare.
Q. Do I have to have a baby shower?
A. Not if you change the baby's diaper very quickly.
Q. What causes baby blues?
A. Tanned, hard-bodied bimbos.
Q. What is colic?
A. A reminder for new parents to use birth control.
Q. What are night terrors?
A. Frightening episodes in which the new mother dreams she's pregnant again.
Q. Our baby was born last week. When will my wife begin to feel and act
normal again?
A. When the kids are in college.
Todays lawyer joke
The madame opened the brothel door in Wilmington and saw a rather dignified,
well-dressed, good-looking man in his late forties or early fifties.
"May I help you, Sir?" she asked.
The man replied, "I want to see Valerie."
"Sir, Valerie is one of our most expensive ladies. Perhaps you would prefer
someone else", said the madame.
He replied, "No, I must see Valerie."
Just then, Valerie appeared and announced to the man she charged $5,000 a
visit.
Without hesitation, the man pulled out five thousand dollars and gave it to
Valerie, and they went upstairs.
After an hour, the man calmly left.
The next night, the man appeared again, once more demanding to see Valerie.
Valerie explained that no one had ever come back two nights in a row as she
was too expensive.
"There are no discounts. The price is still $5,000."
Again, the man pulled out the money, gave it to Valerie, and they went
upstairs.
After an hour, he left.
The following night, the man was there yet again.
Everyone was astounded that he had come for a third consecutive night, but
he paid Valerie and they went upstairs.
After their session, Valerie said to the man, "No one has ever been with me
three nights in a row. Where are you from?"
The man replied, " Charlotte."
"Really," she said. "I have family in Charlotte ."
"I know," the man said. "Your sister died, and I am her attorney. She
asked me to give you your $15,000.00 inheritance."
The moral of the story is that three things in life are certain:
1. Death
2. Taxes
3. Being screwed by a lawyer!
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