The Ides of April!

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OK.  Today’s the day.

And, from my point of view.  I’m so pleased that this is the first time in a long time, that the holiday of Pesach (Passover) did not interfere with my ability to serve my clients’ needs.  That’s right- Pesach won’t be here until Friday, so I could spend this past Sunday to Friday analyzing my clients’ needs and helping them pay the lowest amount of taxes required by law.

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The theory says…

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Of the more bizarre things I learned some five or six decades ago was that everything has a wavelength.   Yes, a car that weighs about a ton has a wavelength; albeit a small one on the order of  5 X 10-47 nm.   And, when compared to the wavelength of red light, which is 700 nm, you can see that the wave properties of a car are pretty darned small- especially in relation to the effect of its mass.

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A Big Winner!

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I’ve written about the winner of the National Science Fair many times.  It’s no longer the Westinghouse, not even Intel.  Nope. Now, it’s the Regeneron Science Talent Search, as it has been since 2017.   (The firm that donates the money [in this case, $100  million over a decade] gets to name it after itself.  Kind of like how many a college building gets named.)

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Did someone drop the ball?

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With the tax season mostly done now, I noticed a problem that needed an IRS fix.

You all know by now that SALT (state, local, and property taxes) have been limited under the Tax Cut and Jobs Act to a maximum deductibility of $ 10K.  The GOP wanted to penalize those states under Democratic Party management, where SALT is usually higher, because better services are provided their citizenry.

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