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Should we have sizemeat tonight from Manhunt dot net?; or should we just go to sleep early - it is already 9:30
Topic Started: May 16 2013, 02:30 PM (279 Views)
Erna
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Then we can get up at 6 tomorrow morning, do our chores and the gym, and be ready for sizemeat in the afternoon.

Discuss!
Edited by Erna, May 16 2013, 02:31 PM.
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Deleted User
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I prefer to masturbate.

Sex with guys from Manhunt is more dangerous than farmed salmon.
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Don't you both have husbands to take care of that?
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I do, but I was expressing I'd prefer to masturbate before allowing some Manhunt skank near my precious Prisspot jewels.
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Erna
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Our marriage is basically over.

our husband has been most unpleasant and un-enthusiastic about sex for a long time now. We think he is hanging on for whatever money he thinks he will inherit if we drop dead suddenly. (But we will be revising our will by the end of the summer)
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Erna
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We found our husband, in 2002, on gaydar!
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MrsPatrickCampbell
May 16 2013, 04:09 PM
Our marriage is basically over.

our husband has been most unpleasant and un-enthusiastic about sex for a long time now. We think he is hanging on for whatever money he thinks he will inherit if we drop dead suddenly. (But we will be revising our will by the end of the summer)
You should disinherit him, but word it mysteriously, like Ms. Crawford. "...for reasons which are well known to him," it should say.

Beware the book he'll publish later, though.
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Tybee
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Lady C, if you're going to look for love outside the marriage you need to hire a pro who has good references, and takes Mastercard. Those anonymous hookup types will one day end up getting you a cut throat.
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Pollyanna Prisspot, School Marm
May 16 2013, 04:17 PM
You should disinherit him, but word it mysteriously, like Ms. Crawford. "...for reasons which are well known to him," it should say.

That's apparently standard language for a will. When mom made out her will she disinherited her eldest three kids using that exact phrase, and the lawyer seemed to be using a template.

Or maybe Miss Crawford was a trendsetter, and once she used it everyone wanted to follow suit.
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May 16 2013, 07:28 PM
Pollyanna Prisspot, School Marm
May 16 2013, 04:17 PM
You should disinherit him, but word it mysteriously, like Ms. Crawford. "...for reasons which are well known to him," it should say.

That's apparently standard language for a will. When mom made out her will she disinherited her eldest three kids using that exact phrase, and the lawyer seemed to be using a template.

Or maybe Miss Crawford was a trendsetter, and once she used it everyone wanted to follow suit.
I prefer to think of her as a trendsetter.

You should have written a book about Mother. That's a trend too!
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Erna
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May 16 2013, 07:28 PM
Pollyanna Prisspot, School Marm
May 16 2013, 04:17 PM
You should disinherit him, but word it mysteriously, like Ms. Crawford. "...for reasons which are well known to him," it should say.

That's apparently standard language for a will. When mom made out her will she disinherited her eldest three kids using that exact phrase, and the lawyer seemed to be using a template.

Or maybe Miss Crawford was a trendsetter, and once she used it everyone wanted to follow suit.
This is why American society is so very very sick, that a parent can dis-inherit his child.

In Europe this is unheard of and totally illegal.

In Europe, where we are under Roman Law and Napoleonic Code, when a man dies his eldest son receives immediately about half of the estate, the rest of the children other amounts per stirpes, and the wife receives about a third.

We may be in-accurate as far as the exact amounts but this is more or less how it goes.

Edited by Erna, May 17 2013, 02:51 AM.
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Erna
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Today or tonight we shall enjoy prime sizemeat from MH dot net!
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MrsPatrickCampbell
May 17 2013, 02:50 AM
In Europe, where we are under Roman Law and Napoleonic Code, when a man dies his eldest son receives immediately about half of the estate, the rest of the children other amounts per stirpes, and the wife receives about a third.
I know of some couples where the woman is the primary bread winner. How does that play out when the husband dies? Does the son still get half their estate even though the woman mostly built it?

It seems rather archaic to pass it onto the eldest son, like ancient tribes did.

In the past, the prince would become the king, or the eldest son would inherit leadership of the tribe, so I know where the idea comes from, but people don't live like that anymore.

At least not here.
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Erna
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May 17 2013, 03:15 PM
MrsPatrickCampbell
May 17 2013, 02:50 AM
In Europe, where we are under Roman Law and Napoleonic Code, when a man dies his eldest son receives immediately about half of the estate, the rest of the children other amounts per stirpes, and the wife receives about a third.
I know of some couples where the woman is the primary bread winner. How does that play out when the husband dies? Does the son still get half their estate even though the woman mostly built it?

It seems rather archaic to pass it onto the eldest son, like ancient tribes did.

In the past, the prince would become the king, or the eldest son would inherit leadership of the tribe, so I know where the idea comes from, but people don't live like that anymore.

At least not here.
They do here......and that's why we like it!
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OMG, famous fantasy author Terry Brooks just ended a facebook post with "Discuss!"
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May 17 2013, 05:31 PM
OMG, famous fantasy author Terry Brooks just ended a facebook post with "Discuss!"
Are we implying that Terry Brooks is MPC?

If so, there are themes in the Shannara series I would like to address with a critical eye.
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I was thinking more along the lines of maybe Terry Brooks has read Zatalounge.

I've only read the first few books and many years ago at that, but what themes?
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Tybee
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Didn't the "discuss" schtick get started by Mike Myers' "Coffee Talk with Linda Richman" on Saturday Night Live?
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