The Postman Always Rings Twice
Getting mail from the IRS is rarely something to celebrate. If it’s a bill, consider yourself lucky — at least you can just pay it and be done. If it’s a “CP 2000” notice proposing a change to your taxes, get ready for a ride on the paperwork tilt-a-whirl. If it’s an audit notice, all […]
The Most Wonderful Time of the Year?
Way back in 1963, the singer Andy Williams introduced one of the most popular Christmas songs of all time: “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year.” Decades later, the office-supply store Staples repurposed it to sell school supplies, and Miller recycled it once again to sell light beer. But for our friends at the […]
Trick Play Backfires; Team Thrown For Loss
College football fans have been crying for a season-ending playoff tournament for years, to replace the invitational “bowl championship” series that usually prompted as many questions as it answered. Monday night they got their wish, as the third-string quarterback Cardale Jones and the Ohio State Buckeyes overcame four turnovers to stun the Oregon Ducks, 42-20, […]
A Royal Mess!
Most of us don’t get to choose our parents. And while we’re usually grateful for the ones we have, we’ve also dreamed of lives that might have been. What little girl hasn’t dreamed of growing up a princess, living in a palace, riding in a horse-drawn carriage, wearing a tiara? And don’t forget marrying a […]
Decoding the Code
The Imitation Game is the critically acclaimed story of Alan Turing, a British mathematician who is widely credited as being the father of computer science and artificial intelligence. Benedict Cumberbatch plays Turing, whose work in cracking Nazi Germany’s “ENIGMA” code helped lift the Allies to victory in World War II. Seventy years later, retiring Senator […]
Our Twelve Days of Christmas
Every year, PNC Bank publishes their “Christmas Wealth Index” to track the cost of the Twelve Days of Christmas. For 2014, it’s $116,273.06, up 1.4% from 2013. (And you thought your holiday spending was out of control!) The index may not be completely accurate — for example, the ten lords-a-leaping are valued using the cost […]
#1 on the Naughty List?
“Christmas comes this time each year,” as the Beach Boys astutely observed in “Little Saint Nick.” That means Santa Claus will be making his annual “list,” checking it twice, and letting us know who’s naughty or nice. (That’s right, Santa “audits” himself by checking it twice.) This year, one San Diego resident will be somewhere […]
Battery-Powered Tax Savings
We know something that’s on your holiday shopping list. And we don’t even have to read your mind to know it. You’re buying batteries — and you’re buying lots of ’em. If you have kids, you’re buying batteries for their electronic games and toys. If you have grandchildren, you’re buying batteries for their stuff. (You […]
Taxation for the Other Guy’s Representation
Our United States of America was forged in the flame of tax protest. As early as 1750, our Founding Fathers objected that taxation without representation is tyranny. In 1776, the Declaration of Independence condemned King George III for assenting to Parliament’s laws that “impose Taxes on us without our Consent.” So is it any surprise […]
400 People Giving Thanks
Back in 1982, Forbes magazine compiled their first “Forbes 400” list of the richest Americans. It took $75 million to gain entry to that first list, which featured an entire country club’s worth of Rockefellers, Mellons, and DuPonts. Shipping magnate Daniel K. Ludwig reigned above the rest, with a net worth of $2 billion. (You […]