it was horrible. it was just like it happened all over again. that one juror, you know, i saw her. i went and talked to her. what did you say? i said she was an idiot. it was certainly difficult for me. it was far more difficult for the family. murray promised the family justice. spent two years putting a new case together. and just weeks before trial, he got a call. it was from tom s attorney saying his client was ready to cut the apron strings and testify against his mom. there s no way that we ever suspected that tom aehlert would ever turn on his mother. he was known to be a mama s boy. but a mama s boy who decided he didn t want to die in prison. tom pleaded guilty to second degree murder, got 15 to life. besides helping connect the crime to his mother, he had somebody else he wanted to give up. that friend of brett. the one brett claimed drove with him in the car and killed jack jessie, despite the fact there was no forensic evidence to
that was heartache, just heartache. i thought i was going to pass out. it was horrible. it was just soul, soul eating. like the night happened all over again. that one juror, i saw her, i wanted to talk to her. what did you say? i said she was an idiot. it was certainly difficult for me. it was fash mor more difficult the family. murray promised justice for the family. and weeks before trial he got a call from tom s attorney saying his client was ready to cut apron strings and testify against his mom. there s no way that we ever suspected that tom would ever turn on his mother. he was known to be a mama s boy. but a mama s boy who decided he didn t want to die in prison. tom pleaded gel toy secouilty se murder.
government provides so many incentives for them not to work. they re frustrated, but that doesn t make them lazy. what it makes them are pawns in government society that has no interest in letting them go, clutching the apron strings. there s something wrong with society that places more emphasis on benefits than it does on jobs. obviously when times are tough, it is understandable. without a limit, it is abuse is also understandable. that s what that gets you. government more focused to use a line to get them to fish than teaching them how to fish. then asking corporate america to up the paycheck to make the math more compelling. i think it is backwards. it is up to the government quit making staying home rewarded. many are protesting not over finding jobs but securing benefits. not over a check for a good day s work but a benefit that
before and after. what do you watch for for something that overstays its welcome? in other words, just vote of keeps going on and just kind of keeps going on and on. you see if you missed something. this artificial economy, interest rates are out of whack. they re killing all kinds of investors, starting with retirees. so how long it lasts is how long it takes for all of these people to look further into the numbers, and come up with something that satisfied or at least making that gets to the question on how high should interest rates really be. some say if the fed were to just quit riding the apron strings for us, that maybe they wouldn t be that dramatically higher anyway. i think they re ready to give the economy a chance to operate on its own. that s what i heard out of bernanke. staying there with the safety net, maybe it s a little smaller or lower down, but staying with that in case things aren t
lincoln s monument, by the hundreds of thousands, they voiced their frustration at their electoral impotence and their love of a country which they believed to be abandon its ideals. many more worked quietly and effectively within a system that gave them scant recognition. and in the land of vietnam, they lie as proof that death accords youth no protected status. their struggle for recognition divided a nation against itself. congress and more than three-fourths of states have now dmermd their wisdom that youth shall have a new birth of freedom, the franchise, rights won at the cost of so much individual and societal suffering may not and shall not be curtailed on the basis of fictions that these men and women are children tied to residential apron strings. dang. in other words, students can vote where they go to college. settled. the holdout of all holdouts, the place where they dug in harder than anywhere else to try to