[16588] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Ex-PayPal insider reveals secret money tricks...
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Profit Siege)
Wed Jun 26 11:05:57 2013
To: mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu
From: "Profit Siege" <ProfitSiege@fueltereued.net>
Date: Wed, 26 Jun 2013 08:05:55 -0700
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PayPal Insider Discovers Lucrative Home Business...
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July 1, 2003: The South Carolina State House in Columbia is shown.APThe
Supreme Court may have ruled ObamaCare is constitutional, but implementing
the controversial federal law would become a crime in South Carolina if
a bill passed by the state House becomes law.The bill, approved Wednesday
by a vote of 65-39, declares President Obama's signature legislation "null
and void." Whereas the law that Obama pushed and Congress passed is
known as the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, South Carolina's
law would be known as the Freedom of Health Care Protection Act.It
would prohibit state officials and employees from "enforcing or attempting
to enforce such unconstitutional laws" and "establish criminal penalties
and civil liability" for those who engage in activities that aid the
implementation of ObamaCare.The Supreme Court ruled last year that ObamaCare's
underlying provision, requiring all Americans to obtain health insurance,
is constitutional, though lawsuits still are pending that argue against
certain parts of that mandate -- in particular, contraceptive coverage,
which some Christian employers argue violates their religious beliefs.In
South Carolina, the nullification bill would allow the state attorney general
to take action against anyone causing harm by the implementation of ObamaCare.
It proceeds to the state Senate for committee review, according to The
Washington Times.Gov. Nikki Haley has rejected the expansion of Medica
ins,
based on police records.West Fertilizer did not have a fence or security
guards, and just one security camera was installed, Cawthon said. Besides
the costs of adding security, the plant was often visited after hours
by farmers needing fertilizer."If the owner was to spend that money to
make this a fortress, it would decrease his business because the farmers
can't come and go," Cawthon said.Daniel Keeney, a spokesman for Adair Grain,
which owned and operated the plant, declined to answer questions about plant
security to avoid "misunderstandings or confusions."Last month's explosion
occurred during the spring planting season, when the plant was especially
busy, officials in the investigation have said. Two months before the explosion,
plant officials reported they could store as much as 270 tons of
ammonium nitrate.Teams from the state fire marshal's office and the U.S.
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are hoping to determine
how much ammonium nitrate was on site when the blast occurred by
studying the 90-foot-crater left in the explosion and combing through records.
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> get said many
of the claimed benefits from EPA clean air regulations "are mostly attributable
to the reduction in public exposure to a single air pollutant: fine
particulate matter."The EPA claims that changes made to emissions standards
and other areas will save billions in health costs for the public.The
same report estimated that in fiscal 2012, 14 major rules came with
between $14.8 billion and $19.5 billion in annual costs, but with between
$53.2 billion and $114.6 billion in annual benefits.The Heritage report's
estimate of the annual costs imposed in 2012 were not that far
off -- Heritage pegged the annual cost of 2012 rules at $23.5
billion.The Heritage report did not delve deeply into the benefits of all
these regulations, though suggested the administration has exaggerated those
numbers. The analysis said the "particulate matter" pollutant EPA often
cites is already subject to EPA regulations, calling the claimed benefits
of additional reductions "speculative."
te number of crime guns in Mexico are ultimately traced to the
United States, the remark is sure to agitate critics of the failed
Fast and Furious operation -- which allowed weapons to "walk" across the
Mexican border as part of an anti-trafficking sting but ended up fueling
violence in the process.Obama, though, is trying to renew focus on gun
violence after the Senate bill failed last month -- he vowed at
the time that the debate was only "round one" in a longer
battle.Republicans concerned that any new laws will be an ineffective way
to reduce crime -- and a threat to the Second Amendment --
are adamant that round two will not be successful either.At the NRA
conference Friday, Republican Texas Sen. Ted Cruz warned "the fight is not
over.""President Obama and Vice President Joe Biden have come out and said
they intend to come back at it," Cruz said."The Constitution matters. All
of the Constitution. It's not pick and choose."Cruz invited Biden to "engage
in an hour-long conversation and debate" on how to stop crime.Biden has
not commented on the invitation. But the remark comes after a Politico.com
report said Biden told law enforcement officials Thursday that he's preparing
to launch a new gun control push.According to Politico, he's planning more
trips to talk about the need for expanded background checks and tougher
gun-trafficking laws, though he reportedly hadn't "really discussed" this
with Obama.Asked about the report Friday, W
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