I'm usually one with no sympathy for an OP who doesn't like getting conflicting opinions, but in this case, some posters have gone beyond offering a different opinion. The OP has been called names. What is that, if not bashing?

I must say, I think she's done a great job of not stooping to the same level and retaliating in kind.
Everyone who disagrees with her feelings has said so. Again and again. She knows what you think. We all know what you think. I should just stop reading this thread if I don't like it, I know

, but it seems to be more about proving you are right to some of the posters here.
She was hurt, she vented. She was wheedled enough to get fed up and say OK, yes she felt entitled. No need to continue the gloating over it.
Entitled may be too strong a word, but really, don't most children inherit their parents assets? I come from a background where couples nearly always marry for life (except one aunt, who's done it 4 times!

) , so I've really never run across this situation in my own family. When one parent dies, they leave their assets to the other parent. When that parent dies, the assets go to the kids. Isn't that how it worked before divorce and remarriage became so commonplace?
Even now that it is so common, you see a lot of people setting up trusts to hold their assets after their death. The new spouse gets the income from the assets, continues to live in the home, etc, until his/her death, then the assets are distributed to the children of the original owner. That is what I would do if my dh died and I remarried, and I would "expect" it of my own parents, not out of greed or selfishness, but because I just couldn't fathom
not ensuring that the assets stay in my own family and not that of my new spouse's adult children.
Of course, I would have much rather seen my parents live longer and in better health and be able to enjoy their retirement, spending all their money on fabulous vacations, but the fact is, even if they had, they were too financially responsible to spend every last penny and die with no home or savings.