Good stuff, albeit understandably similar to Ryan’s speech last night, right down to the setting and studiously soft-spoken delivery. Even so, I want to promote it as a way of patting him on the back for floating his proposal for $500 billion in cuts this year. That plan is dead on arrival, needless to say, but passing it isn’t what Paul is after. What he’s trying to do with that eyepopping number is communicate the magnitude of the problem to the public in hopes of moving the Overton window on spending — because if this new Gallup poll is right, it’s going to need a lot of moving. And not just among Democrats, either:
Not a single point’s worth of difference between Republicans and Democrats on Social Security despite fiscal responsibility having rocketed to the top of the conservative policy agenda over the past two years. I don’t know how else to account for that except as a near-catastrophic failure by prominent Republicans to explain even to their own base that eliminating earmarks and cutting NPR’s funding and canceling a pie-in-the-sky defense project or two isn’t remotely equal to the task of guaranteeing sustainability. Case in point: Not only didn’t Ryan squarely address Social Security and Medicare last night (“the politics of evasion,” Ross Douthat calls it) but even a fearless deficit hawk like Paul, speaking only to an online audience, didn’t go after them here. Anyone who’s serious about balancing the budget long-term must support entitlement reform, no matter how unpleasant the prospect might be, but rarely does the public hear that point made by a prominent politician. And the entirely predictable tragedy of last night’s SOTU, as Tom Coburn argued in his op-ed this morning, is that only leadership from the most prominent politician of all is realistically capable of moving public opinion on this — yet that leadership was almost entirely absent last night. Writes Yuval Levin of the missed opportunity, “This speech was worse than bland and empty, it was a dereliction of duty.” And here’s Matt Welch:
[T]he president, though he is much more serious on this issue than a huge swath of his political party, is nonetheless not remotely serious about this issue. Vowing to cut $400 billion over 10 years (a plan that, judging by the two people clapping when he proposed it, will likely be cut to ribbons if it survives through Congress), at a moment when the deficit for this year is more than three times that, indicates that Democrats (and a helluva lot of Republicans as well) are hunkering down in our awful status quo–half-heartedly tinkering around the edges of spending, making incremental changes this way and that, then launching new moonshots and redoubling old impotent efforts. Politicians have put us on the precipice of financial ruin, and they show no indication of doing a damned thing about it.
And I think they know it. Look at the plaintive, semi-desperate, Stuart Smalleyesque mantra Obama kept repeating at the end: “We do big things.” By his insistence his anxiety shall be revealed. We don’t do big things, America, not in the moonshotty Marshall Plan way of speechwriters’ cliche box. Increasingly, we don’t do little things, either–like keeping libraries open five days a week in California. What we do is snarf up ever-larger portions of your grandkids’ money for purposes that are usually obscure and often criminal.
Read his whole post, including and especially the concluding line. Just as I’m writing this, and as a prelude to Paul’s video, the AP is across the wires with news from CBO that its projections for Social Security were wrong: They used to believe that the program wouldn’t start running permanent deficits until 2016, but it turns out the deficits will begin this year. (We’ll likely have a separate post on that later.) Like Paul says, the day of reckoning is at hand.
Wall Street bankers no longer evaluate risk well, allocate capital well, or aggregate capital efficiently. They are a drag on our economy and efficient markets. According to Paul Volcker, financial innovation over the last 30 years has added only one useful element to our economy …. the ATM.
Dimon and company should just STFU. They crashed the economy, we bailed them out for their stupid greedy behavior, and now their feelings are hurt because we remind them that their wealth was based on a perfect storm that they lobbied for and manufactured. It was one which merged:
- a Ponzi scheme of unregulated derivatives;
- regulatory capture;
- Mr. Andrea Mitchell worshipping the slut Ayn Rand’s philosophy of deregulation;
- Washington/main stream media/Wall Street/Very Serious People group think;
- cops on the beat averting their eyes;
- cops taken off the beat of white collar crime to fight terrorism;
- journalists learning nothing from Enron;
- journalists intimidated because they don’t understand math;
- budget cuts in journalism;
- predatory lending;
- rampant mortgage fraud the FBI warned about in 2004;
- Moodys and S&P having perverse incentives to give triple AAA ratings to lousy securities;
- the economics profession subject to “academic capture”
…..the list goes on and on.
Dimon and his fellow travelers are lucky they aren’t in jail.
If you don’t have time to see the movie, for fun viewing, check out the trailer to Inside Job.
http://www.sonyclassics.com/insidejob/
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Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 2/6/11 - Mile High Report
Horse Tracks -- Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee.
Breaking <b>news</b>: Bar Rafaeli enters Big Brother house in Israel
Big Brother Israel, now airing it's third season, saw a special guest enter the house - world renowned Victoria's Secret model and Leo's main squeeze, Bar.
Google Mobile App For iOS - Geek <b>News</b> Central
There's a free Google Mobile App that I found in the iPod/iPhone app store that I decided to give a try. On loading it for the first time, I immediately.
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Good stuff, albeit understandably similar to Ryan’s speech last night, right down to the setting and studiously soft-spoken delivery. Even so, I want to promote it as a way of patting him on the back for floating his proposal for $500 billion in cuts this year. That plan is dead on arrival, needless to say, but passing it isn’t what Paul is after. What he’s trying to do with that eyepopping number is communicate the magnitude of the problem to the public in hopes of moving the Overton window on spending — because if this new Gallup poll is right, it’s going to need a lot of moving. And not just among Democrats, either:
Not a single point’s worth of difference between Republicans and Democrats on Social Security despite fiscal responsibility having rocketed to the top of the conservative policy agenda over the past two years. I don’t know how else to account for that except as a near-catastrophic failure by prominent Republicans to explain even to their own base that eliminating earmarks and cutting NPR’s funding and canceling a pie-in-the-sky defense project or two isn’t remotely equal to the task of guaranteeing sustainability. Case in point: Not only didn’t Ryan squarely address Social Security and Medicare last night (“the politics of evasion,” Ross Douthat calls it) but even a fearless deficit hawk like Paul, speaking only to an online audience, didn’t go after them here. Anyone who’s serious about balancing the budget long-term must support entitlement reform, no matter how unpleasant the prospect might be, but rarely does the public hear that point made by a prominent politician. And the entirely predictable tragedy of last night’s SOTU, as Tom Coburn argued in his op-ed this morning, is that only leadership from the most prominent politician of all is realistically capable of moving public opinion on this — yet that leadership was almost entirely absent last night. Writes Yuval Levin of the missed opportunity, “This speech was worse than bland and empty, it was a dereliction of duty.” And here’s Matt Welch:
[T]he president, though he is much more serious on this issue than a huge swath of his political party, is nonetheless not remotely serious about this issue. Vowing to cut $400 billion over 10 years (a plan that, judging by the two people clapping when he proposed it, will likely be cut to ribbons if it survives through Congress), at a moment when the deficit for this year is more than three times that, indicates that Democrats (and a helluva lot of Republicans as well) are hunkering down in our awful status quo–half-heartedly tinkering around the edges of spending, making incremental changes this way and that, then launching new moonshots and redoubling old impotent efforts. Politicians have put us on the precipice of financial ruin, and they show no indication of doing a damned thing about it.
And I think they know it. Look at the plaintive, semi-desperate, Stuart Smalleyesque mantra Obama kept repeating at the end: “We do big things.” By his insistence his anxiety shall be revealed. We don’t do big things, America, not in the moonshotty Marshall Plan way of speechwriters’ cliche box. Increasingly, we don’t do little things, either–like keeping libraries open five days a week in California. What we do is snarf up ever-larger portions of your grandkids’ money for purposes that are usually obscure and often criminal.
Read his whole post, including and especially the concluding line. Just as I’m writing this, and as a prelude to Paul’s video, the AP is across the wires with news from CBO that its projections for Social Security were wrong: They used to believe that the program wouldn’t start running permanent deficits until 2016, but it turns out the deficits will begin this year. (We’ll likely have a separate post on that later.) Like Paul says, the day of reckoning is at hand.
Wall Street bankers no longer evaluate risk well, allocate capital well, or aggregate capital efficiently. They are a drag on our economy and efficient markets. According to Paul Volcker, financial innovation over the last 30 years has added only one useful element to our economy …. the ATM.
Dimon and company should just STFU. They crashed the economy, we bailed them out for their stupid greedy behavior, and now their feelings are hurt because we remind them that their wealth was based on a perfect storm that they lobbied for and manufactured. It was one which merged:
- a Ponzi scheme of unregulated derivatives;
- regulatory capture;
- Mr. Andrea Mitchell worshipping the slut Ayn Rand’s philosophy of deregulation;
- Washington/main stream media/Wall Street/Very Serious People group think;
- cops on the beat averting their eyes;
- cops taken off the beat of white collar crime to fight terrorism;
- journalists learning nothing from Enron;
- journalists intimidated because they don’t understand math;
- budget cuts in journalism;
- predatory lending;
- rampant mortgage fraud the FBI warned about in 2004;
- Moodys and S&P having perverse incentives to give triple AAA ratings to lousy securities;
- the economics profession subject to “academic capture”
…..the list goes on and on.
Dimon and his fellow travelers are lucky they aren’t in jail.
If you don’t have time to see the movie, for fun viewing, check out the trailer to Inside Job.
http://www.sonyclassics.com/insidejob/
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Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 2/6/11 - Mile High Report
Horse Tracks -- Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee.
Breaking <b>news</b>: Bar Rafaeli enters Big Brother house in Israel
Big Brother Israel, now airing it's third season, saw a special guest enter the house - world renowned Victoria's Secret model and Leo's main squeeze, Bar.
Google Mobile App For iOS - Geek <b>News</b> Central
There's a free Google Mobile App that I found in the iPod/iPhone app store that I decided to give a try. On loading it for the first time, I immediately.
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Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 2/6/11 - Mile High Report
Horse Tracks -- Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee.
Breaking <b>news</b>: Bar Rafaeli enters Big Brother house in Israel
Big Brother Israel, now airing it's third season, saw a special guest enter the house - world renowned Victoria's Secret model and Leo's main squeeze, Bar.
Google Mobile App For iOS - Geek <b>News</b> Central
There's a free Google Mobile App that I found in the iPod/iPhone app store that I decided to give a try. On loading it for the first time, I immediately.
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Good stuff, albeit understandably similar to Ryan’s speech last night, right down to the setting and studiously soft-spoken delivery. Even so, I want to promote it as a way of patting him on the back for floating his proposal for $500 billion in cuts this year. That plan is dead on arrival, needless to say, but passing it isn’t what Paul is after. What he’s trying to do with that eyepopping number is communicate the magnitude of the problem to the public in hopes of moving the Overton window on spending — because if this new Gallup poll is right, it’s going to need a lot of moving. And not just among Democrats, either:
Not a single point’s worth of difference between Republicans and Democrats on Social Security despite fiscal responsibility having rocketed to the top of the conservative policy agenda over the past two years. I don’t know how else to account for that except as a near-catastrophic failure by prominent Republicans to explain even to their own base that eliminating earmarks and cutting NPR’s funding and canceling a pie-in-the-sky defense project or two isn’t remotely equal to the task of guaranteeing sustainability. Case in point: Not only didn’t Ryan squarely address Social Security and Medicare last night (“the politics of evasion,” Ross Douthat calls it) but even a fearless deficit hawk like Paul, speaking only to an online audience, didn’t go after them here. Anyone who’s serious about balancing the budget long-term must support entitlement reform, no matter how unpleasant the prospect might be, but rarely does the public hear that point made by a prominent politician. And the entirely predictable tragedy of last night’s SOTU, as Tom Coburn argued in his op-ed this morning, is that only leadership from the most prominent politician of all is realistically capable of moving public opinion on this — yet that leadership was almost entirely absent last night. Writes Yuval Levin of the missed opportunity, “This speech was worse than bland and empty, it was a dereliction of duty.” And here’s Matt Welch:
[T]he president, though he is much more serious on this issue than a huge swath of his political party, is nonetheless not remotely serious about this issue. Vowing to cut $400 billion over 10 years (a plan that, judging by the two people clapping when he proposed it, will likely be cut to ribbons if it survives through Congress), at a moment when the deficit for this year is more than three times that, indicates that Democrats (and a helluva lot of Republicans as well) are hunkering down in our awful status quo–half-heartedly tinkering around the edges of spending, making incremental changes this way and that, then launching new moonshots and redoubling old impotent efforts. Politicians have put us on the precipice of financial ruin, and they show no indication of doing a damned thing about it.
And I think they know it. Look at the plaintive, semi-desperate, Stuart Smalleyesque mantra Obama kept repeating at the end: “We do big things.” By his insistence his anxiety shall be revealed. We don’t do big things, America, not in the moonshotty Marshall Plan way of speechwriters’ cliche box. Increasingly, we don’t do little things, either–like keeping libraries open five days a week in California. What we do is snarf up ever-larger portions of your grandkids’ money for purposes that are usually obscure and often criminal.
Read his whole post, including and especially the concluding line. Just as I’m writing this, and as a prelude to Paul’s video, the AP is across the wires with news from CBO that its projections for Social Security were wrong: They used to believe that the program wouldn’t start running permanent deficits until 2016, but it turns out the deficits will begin this year. (We’ll likely have a separate post on that later.) Like Paul says, the day of reckoning is at hand.
Wall Street bankers no longer evaluate risk well, allocate capital well, or aggregate capital efficiently. They are a drag on our economy and efficient markets. According to Paul Volcker, financial innovation over the last 30 years has added only one useful element to our economy …. the ATM.
Dimon and company should just STFU. They crashed the economy, we bailed them out for their stupid greedy behavior, and now their feelings are hurt because we remind them that their wealth was based on a perfect storm that they lobbied for and manufactured. It was one which merged:
- a Ponzi scheme of unregulated derivatives;
- regulatory capture;
- Mr. Andrea Mitchell worshipping the slut Ayn Rand’s philosophy of deregulation;
- Washington/main stream media/Wall Street/Very Serious People group think;
- cops on the beat averting their eyes;
- cops taken off the beat of white collar crime to fight terrorism;
- journalists learning nothing from Enron;
- journalists intimidated because they don’t understand math;
- budget cuts in journalism;
- predatory lending;
- rampant mortgage fraud the FBI warned about in 2004;
- Moodys and S&P having perverse incentives to give triple AAA ratings to lousy securities;
- the economics profession subject to “academic capture”
…..the list goes on and on.
Dimon and his fellow travelers are lucky they aren’t in jail.
If you don’t have time to see the movie, for fun viewing, check out the trailer to Inside Job.
http://www.sonyclassics.com/insidejob/
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benchcraft company portland or
Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 2/6/11 - Mile High Report
Horse Tracks -- Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee.
Breaking <b>news</b>: Bar Rafaeli enters Big Brother house in Israel
Big Brother Israel, now airing it's third season, saw a special guest enter the house - world renowned Victoria's Secret model and Leo's main squeeze, Bar.
Google Mobile App For iOS - Geek <b>News</b> Central
There's a free Google Mobile App that I found in the iPod/iPhone app store that I decided to give a try. On loading it for the first time, I immediately.
bench craft company reviews
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Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 2/6/11 - Mile High Report
Horse Tracks -- Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee.
Breaking <b>news</b>: Bar Rafaeli enters Big Brother house in Israel
Big Brother Israel, now airing it's third season, saw a special guest enter the house - world renowned Victoria's Secret model and Leo's main squeeze, Bar.
Google Mobile App For iOS - Geek <b>News</b> Central
There's a free Google Mobile App that I found in the iPod/iPhone app store that I decided to give a try. On loading it for the first time, I immediately.
benchcraft company scam
Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 2/6/11 - Mile High Report
Horse Tracks -- Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee.
Breaking <b>news</b>: Bar Rafaeli enters Big Brother house in Israel
Big Brother Israel, now airing it's third season, saw a special guest enter the house - world renowned Victoria's Secret model and Leo's main squeeze, Bar.
Google Mobile App For iOS - Geek <b>News</b> Central
There's a free Google Mobile App that I found in the iPod/iPhone app store that I decided to give a try. On loading it for the first time, I immediately.
benchcraft company scam
Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 2/6/11 - Mile High Report
Horse Tracks -- Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee.
Breaking <b>news</b>: Bar Rafaeli enters Big Brother house in Israel
Big Brother Israel, now airing it's third season, saw a special guest enter the house - world renowned Victoria's Secret model and Leo's main squeeze, Bar.
Google Mobile App For iOS - Geek <b>News</b> Central
There's a free Google Mobile App that I found in the iPod/iPhone app store that I decided to give a try. On loading it for the first time, I immediately.
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benchcraft company portland or
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Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 2/6/11 - Mile High Report
Horse Tracks -- Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee.
Breaking <b>news</b>: Bar Rafaeli enters Big Brother house in Israel
Big Brother Israel, now airing it's third season, saw a special guest enter the house - world renowned Victoria's Secret model and Leo's main squeeze, Bar.
Google Mobile App For iOS - Geek <b>News</b> Central
There's a free Google Mobile App that I found in the iPod/iPhone app store that I decided to give a try. On loading it for the first time, I immediately.
benchcraft company scam
Craigslist is a 25-person company, worth a reported $2 billion. It offers a service for posting ads in local cities all across the world. Many marketers take advantage of these free local ads to position themselves in front of a lot of hungry money spending buyers. So, if Craigslist was such an amazing site why is it that many marketers fail to use it in their businesses? That's because Craigslist can be quite difficult for posting multiple ads through the day. Their staff has made the site more of a hassle for marketers rather than an advantage, but then again it all depends on who's eyes you're viewing it from.
What you need to know before you use Craigslist:
1)
Even though Craigslist is a free ad posting site you still will need to put a lot of time and money into seeing any success with it
2)
You need to be continuously changing your marketing strategy because their staff continues to change the ghosting protocol so your ads will not stick
3)
The steps in this article will assist you in posting ads, but you still need to change things up to trick the system
How to Post on Craigslist
1)
You need to setup multiple email accounts that way you can create Craigslist accounts
2)
You need to have multiple access to different phone numbers so you can verify each Craigslist account created
3)
You need to create an ad campaign, each ad varying in different forms inlducing
a.Different Headline
b.Different Body
*Craigslist doesn't have allow similar ads so try and vary your ad as much as possible each time
How Many Ads Can You Post On Craigslist?:
There are a few tricks that you can do to that allow you to hide your presence from Craigslist. You should play it safe and post only 3 ads per every account on Craigslist. You should also change your IP address every 5 ads. This will help when it comes to your ads getting ghosted(term that refers to your ad being up and having a URL but it doesn't appear on the actually Craigslist.org site)
Reseting Your Internet:
When posting ads on Craigslist you want to make sure and clear your internet history, cookies, and saved passwords. You want to make sure that you don't have a single trace of your presence to Craigslist because if they detect you, your ads won't go up or you will get banned from the site. It's recommended to reset and clear everything in your browser every single time you change email addresses for posting. The more you can be invisible to Craigslist the better it will be for your business.
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Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 2/6/11 - Mile High Report
Horse Tracks -- Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee.
Breaking <b>news</b>: Bar Rafaeli enters Big Brother house in Israel
Big Brother Israel, now airing it's third season, saw a special guest enter the house - world renowned Victoria's Secret model and Leo's main squeeze, Bar.
Google Mobile App For iOS - Geek <b>News</b> Central
There's a free Google Mobile App that I found in the iPod/iPhone app store that I decided to give a try. On loading it for the first time, I immediately.
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Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 2/6/11 - Mile High Report
Horse Tracks -- Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee.
Breaking <b>news</b>: Bar Rafaeli enters Big Brother house in Israel
Big Brother Israel, now airing it's third season, saw a special guest enter the house - world renowned Victoria's Secret model and Leo's main squeeze, Bar.
Google Mobile App For iOS - Geek <b>News</b> Central
There's a free Google Mobile App that I found in the iPod/iPhone app store that I decided to give a try. On loading it for the first time, I immediately.
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