[16605] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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Back Taxes weighing you down?

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Tax Settle)
Wed Jun 26 16:50:22 2013

To: mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu
Date: Wed, 26 Jun 2013 13:50:21 -0700
From: "Tax Settle" <TaxSettle@godinwispoctoon.net>

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We can help you with IRS Tax Debt 

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 Jan. 14, 2013: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, center, speaks during a 
news conference announcing an agreement with legislative leaders on New 
York's Secure Ammunition and Firearms Enforcement Act in the Red Room at 
the Capitol.apALBANY, N.Y.  Key measures of New York's tough new gun 
law are set to kick in, with owners of guns now reclassified 
as assault weapons required to register the firearms and new limits on 
the number of bullets allowed in magazines.As the new provisions take effect 
Monday, New York's affiliate of the National Rifle Association said it plans 
to head to court to seek an immediate halt to the magazine 
limit.Gov. Andrew Cuomo calls those and other provisions in the state's 
new gun law common sense while dismissing criticisms he says come from 
"extreme fringe conservatives" who claim the government has no right to 
regulate guns."Yes, they are against it, but they are the extremists and 
the extremists shouldn't win, especially on this issue when it is so 
important to the majority," Cuomo said in a radio interview Wednesday. "In 
politics, we have to be willing to take on the extremists, otherwise 
you will see paralysis."New York's new gun restrictions, the first in the 
nation passed following December's massacre at a Connecticut elementary 
school, limit state gun owners to no more than seven bullets in 
magazines, except at competitions or firing ranges.The new regulations in 
New York commence as the U.S. Senate prepares to 
  
is the latest company to respond this way to the Affordable Health 
Care Act's requirement that employees at companies of a certain size who 
work more than 30 hours per week be provided health coverage. Applebee's 
and Olive Garden also scaled back the hours of workers. A handful 
of colleges have cut hours because of the law, including Palm Beach 
State College in Florida and New Jerseys Kean University. Critics say the 
law is boomeranging on working folks."If you want to have reduced work, 
lower wages and economic stagnation, this is a great way to do 
it, said Ed Haislmaier, senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation.One 
Regal theater manager told FoxNews.com the move has sparked a wave of 
resignations from full-time managers who have seen their hours cut by 25 
percent or more.In the last couple weeks, managers have been quitting on 
a daily basis from various locations to try and find full-time work, 
said the manager, who asked not to be named. Regal up until 
now has never restricted anyone to anything below 40 hours.The manager told 
FoxNews.com ObamaCare has had the unintended consequence of taking food 
off his table.Mandatingbusinesses to offer health care under threat ofdebilitatingfines 
does not fix a problem, it creates one," he said. "It fosters 
a new business culture where 30 hours is now consideredthe maximum in 
order to avoid paying the high costs associated with this law.In a 
time where 40 hours is just getting us by, 

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> Arkansas House members failed to approve a budget bill for a plan 
to use federal Medicaid dollars to buy private health insurance for low-income 
residents, slowing the Legislature to a crawl in what was expected to 
be its final week of meetings.The House voted 69-28 in favor, leaving 
the "private option" proposal six votes short of the 75 votes needed 
for it to pass. The plan would let Arkansas use federal Medicaid 
funds to buy private insurance for low-income residents under the new federal 
health care plan.Legislators had already approved a bill setting up the 
program, but an attached budget bill needs a supermajority -- three-fourths 
of each chamber -- before it can take effect. The proposal also 
requires final approval from the federal government, which has endorsed 
the concept but wants to see specifics.A Friday vote had been set, 
but House leaders who support the bill delayed work so representatives could 
explain the plan to constituents. After Monday's vote, the House immediately 
adjourned until Tuesday. Leading lawmakers had previously said they wanted 
to finish up work for this year's legislative session by this Friday.Gov. 
Mike Beebe said after the vote that legislators should just end the 
session if they don't plan to reconsider and pass the bill, and 
that he would not call a special session for them to consider 
it again."If they don't pass it tomorrow, then shut the session down 
and go home," Beebe told reporters after Monda
 to continue," 
he said. "We are taking the prudent steps that we've talked about, 
in terms of ensuring that our homeland is defended and our allies 
are defended."He added: "Any absence of provocative behavior or unhelpful 
rhetoric is a good thing in this case, but, again, I would 
not suggest that we believe the cycle of behavior has ended necessarily. 
We are -- as monitoring this as closely today as we were 
over the weekend and in previous days and weeks.And taking the necessary 
measures and working with our partners and allies to make clear to 
North Korea what the result of that kind of decision would be, 
in terms of condemnation and isolation and further sanction."Carney said 
the administration is engaging the Russians and Chinese in efforts to pressure 
North Korea to back down.Meanwhile, North Koreans celebrated the birthday 
of their first leader Monday by dancing in plazas and snacking on 
peanuts, with little hint of the fiery language that has kept the 
international community fearful that a missile launch may be imminent.Pyongyang 
fired off a rocket ahead of the last anniversary of Kim Il 
Sung's birth -- the centennial -- but this time the day was 
simply the start of a two-day holiday for Pyongyang residents who spilled 
into the streets.Elsewhere in the region, however, the focus remained on 
the threat of a launch as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry 
wrapped up a tour to coordinate Washington's response with Beijing, North 
Kore
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