| Thanks for explaining the basics of life to me. Thanks to you, I've learned that a) A hypothetical story about a hypothetical great-grandfather apparently invalidates the value of family heirlooms b) crafted items are valuable because of the information they hold, which inform us how people thought and what their approach to something was. Their purchasing patterns, however, tell us absolutely nothing about how they thought, what their approach was, or what types of things they valued. c) Having family heirlooms which were foolishly bought back in the day is primitive thinking (and a sign of being poor). If your will isn't one hundred percent cash you are wasting everybody's time. d) Sentimental value is bullshit, and market value is a straw man; heirlooms apparently have literally no value at all. e) You have to make your "name" on your own, but if your name is hard for people to pronounce then you should just deal with it when they give you a different one. Thanks for clearing all that up. |