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Entries by Thinker (755)

Lower electric bills with this new device

 




The whole world is supposed to be "going green" and supporting the "green agenda". How about instead of fattening up the utility company profits isn't it time that we do something to lower our own energy costs and therby help the environment!


Learn more www.ecotrustenergy.com/scottmathieu

 Or call 352-688-7269 24/7

 

PowerwoRx-e3 is a new product which provides a Whole House Energy System for the best possible energy savings and protection based upon a unique technology that provides three key benefits:



1. Energy Savings

2. Equipment Protection

3. Electrical Noise Filtration

 


1. Energy Savings

PowerwoRx e3 is an amazing new product which provides energy savings by reducing the amount of power drawn from your utility with the use of specially designed harmonic resistant capacitors. PowerwoRx e3 systems optimize your home's power factor thus reducing the amount of energy your homes motor loads use such as air conditioners, refrigerators, freezers, washers, dryers, dishwashers, pool pumps, vacuum cleaners, furnace blower motors, fans, etc. Motor loads require more energy to do their work compared to other electrical equipment in your home. The PowerwoRx e3's "power factor optimization" significantly increases the efficiency of your motor load and stores waste energy resulting in decreased demand and usage of electricity from your utility company. This equates to significant cost savings for you the home owner.

Power factor is the measurement of how efficient your electrical system is using the energy delivered to your home from your utility company. For example, your stove and dryer heating coils and incadescent light bulbs have a "power factor rating" of unity or 1. This equipment converts electric energy to heat and light. Motor loads as described above can have"power factor ratings" as low as .2. This combination of electric loads in American homes results in an average "power facotr rating" of .77 or less. the .77 indicates that your home is using more energy than it should to operate your electrical equipment. The PowerwoRx e3 technology has a proven track record of increasing a home's "power factor rating" to .95 or better.


2.Equipment Protection

PowerwoRx e3 technology provides Surge and Spike Suppression, a feature that will help protect and extend the useful life of your electrical equipment. Voltage surges and spikes come from many different internal and external sources such as utility grid changes, damaged transformers or electrical lines due to accidents or acts of God, old or out dated utility transformers that supply electrical power to your home, lightning and turning on and off major motor loads in your home.

Typical homes in the United States are bombarded with literally hundreds of surges and spikes a day that damage sensitive electrical equipment over time. A combination of the PowerwoRx e3 harmonic resistant capacitors and metal oxide varistors (MOV's) give the home owner the maximum protection available on the market today. The external lights on the PowerwoRx e3 system provide an easy visual indicator that the system is protecting your home.

3. Electrical Noise Filtration

PowerwoRx e3 technology provides Harmonic Filtration which has become more important since the 1980's and almost mandatory going into the 21st Century due to the proliferation of computers, fax and copy machines and variable frequency drives which are know as "nonlinear loads". "Nonlinear loads" ask for and use electrical current in "pulses" unlike traditional electrical equipment.

This pulse use of electrical current creates damaging noise, interference and heat on today's electrical systems causing interference within sensitive electrical equipment or worse causing them to overheat and fail. The use of computerized electronics within the American home has been growing at exponential rates and the need for filtering out the interference, noise and heat created by nonlinear loads has never been greater.

How Would This Help the Environment?

Installing the PowerwoRx e3 system in your home will reduce the need to produce electrical energy reducing the amount of coal and oil being burned to generate the electric energy, resulting in the reduction of environmentally harmful emissions of carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide and sulfur dioxide.

If 500,000 homes across the country installed PowerwoRx e3 systems this would reduce the need to generate 17 megawatts of electricity: saving 42,250 tons of coal or 231,500 barrels of oil and reducing by 98,250 tons of carbon dioxide, 42,000 pounds of nitrous oxide and 221,500 pounds of sulfur dioxide of annual greenhouse emissions.

Posted on Sunday, November 30, 2008 at 04:39PM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

Christians is your sex life dull, visit this great web site

http://www.themarriagebed.com/

 

As I christian Ive found good sex advice hard tho find. A number of great places to get sex toyz without porn are featured at this site as well.

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Posted on Saturday, November 22, 2008 at 12:48PM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

Obama restores the clinton Mafia

  • Scott here Obama has shown that he is an empty suit ,having to fall back on the Clinton mob to staff the White "change" House.
  • Am I the only one that finds irony in the fact that the Obama children are attending Sidwell a expensive mostly white private school ? Obama opposes school choice for the great unwashed and his decisions smells of "middleclassedness" and the elitism so common among socialist oligarchs world wide !
  • My friend Victor shares my disgust

 

So that was it?   [Victor Davis Hanson]

So a mere two weeks after victory, 'hope and change' and 'a break from the past' reified into parceling out posts to dozens of Clintonite retreads, plenty of the old requisite Ivy-League law degrees, ample influence from establishment ex-lobbyists, de rigueur Sidwell Friends for the kids, and apparent sudden existential angst and uncertainty over FISA, getting out pronto from Iraq, closing down the Constitution-shredding Gitmo, and overturning the McCarthyite Patriot Act—and all to acclaim and relief from aristocratic Beltway pundits of both parties? So that was all the election was about? Just new faces on the same old, same old? And relief that Treasury, the National Security Advisorship, and Defense will be in the hands of well-known centrists? And at least on national and homeland security it is perhaps not the shadow of Bill Clinton, but of George W. Bush, that now begins to loom large?

Posted on Saturday, November 22, 2008 at 12:33PM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

Thomas jefferson rebukes hank paulson

Quote of the Week
'I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around the banks will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered.'
Thomas Jefferson 1802

Posted on Friday, November 21, 2008 at 10:22AM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

Oil keeps falling !

By Esther Bintliff and Javier Blas

Published: November 20 2008 11:24 | Last updated: November 20 2008 20:42

Oil sank below $50 a barrel, reaching its lowest point since May 2005 amid fears over the outlook for demand in the face of a global recession.

The drop in oil prices led a broader retreat in raw materials, with the Reuters-Jefferies CRB commodity index, a global benchmark, falling to a five-year low.

Nymex December West Texas Intermediate fell $4 to $49.62 a barrel.

January WTI traded $4.68 lower at $49.42 a barrel. ICE January Brent dropped $3.64 to $48.08.

“Oil prices are searching for an elusive bottom,” said Antoine Halff of Newedge brokerage in New York. “Demand destruction today rivals that caused by the oil shocks of the 1970s.”

The options market is pricing in a growing likelihood that oil prices could sink as low as $40-$45 a barrel before the end of the year, with the cost of insuring against such an event jumping more than 90 per cent overnight.

In a further sign of the problems being suffered across the oil industry by falling demand, StatoilHydro of Norway announced on Thursday that it would shut oil products trading operations in Singapore, the world’s third largest energy hub.

Oil trading volumes in Singapore have declined in the past three months as concerns over counterparty risk have pummelled the over-the-counter market. Trading volumes fell about 44 per cent in September.

Jan Karlsen, a senior vice-president at StatoilHydro, said product trading would now be concentrated around its European refining assets.

“The decision will not affect any of our trading activities in crude or gas liquids, the key trading areas for StatoilHydro,” Mr Karlsen said.

Gold was a rare bright spot as investors sought its safe haven status. It rose 2.1 per cent to $748 an ounce.

Base metals extended their retreat, with copper breaking the $3,500 level to touch a three-year low of $3,430 a tonne, before recovering to $3,467 a tonne, down 3.6 per cent on the day.

Rising copper inventories at London Metal Exchange warehouses put pressure on prices, with stocks climbing 1,575 tonnes to 281,625 tonnes, the highest level since February 2004.

Meanwhile, Codelco, the world’s largest copper producer, cut its surcharge on sales to China by 32 per cent, in a bid to lure buyers into long-term contracts even as demand and prices slide.

One analyst at Antaike, the Chinese state-run information provider, said that fewer long-term contracts were expected from China next year, as consumers would look to the spot market for supplies, given the high levels of price volatility.

The price of copper has fallen 60 per cent since its all-time high of $8,940 a tonne set in July.

Aluminium shed 4.7 per cent to $1,78 a tonne, under pressure from a surge in LME stocks, up 20,850 tonnes.

Lead dropped 3.5 per cent to $1,187 a tonne. One of China’s lead producers, Xinling Refining Company, said it was mothballing 60 per cent of its 100,000 tonne capacity.

Zinc was 0.4 per cent lower at $1,175 a tonne and nickel lost 4.3 per cent to $10,000 a tonne.

Agricultural commodities also fell on the day, with CBOT December corn down 3.7 per cent to $3.64¾ a bushel. Wheat and soyabean prices dropped

Posted on Friday, November 21, 2008 at 10:00AM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

Stocks continue trip to the crapper

Stocks decline as hopes fade for immediate handout

By Scott Atomic AA Business Writer

Stocks fall as hopes for immediate bailout for auto industry fade; vote could come next month

NEW YORK (AA) -- Flip-flopping sentiment about the prospects for U.S. automakers battered stocks again Thursday as hopes rose then fell that lawmakers would soon put together an aid package for the companies and the democrats union members. Stocks declined after a brief advance that came on hopes that Washington would agree to help Detroit's Big Three.

 asking the companies to present a plan to show how the $25 billion cash injection they have sought would be used. Stocks rose briefly Thursday after a bipartisan group of senators reached a compromise to funnel emergency loans to General Motors, Ford and Chrysler.

Investors seemed unmoved by remarks from Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson who said in a speech Thursday that the financial crisis hitting the global economy was something likely to occur only "once or twice" in a 100 years. He cautioned against overreacting by implementing regulations that are too onerous.

Analysts said the worries about the automakers are only one of many concerns for the market and the uncertainty about the overall economy was battering stocks.

"There are lots of crosscurrents, generally more negative than positive," said Gary Townsend, president and chief executive of Hill-Townsend Capital.

In midafternoon trading, the Dow Jones industrial average fell 98.37, or 1.23 percent, to 7,898.91. The Dow on Wednesday tumbled 427 points to close below the 8,000 mark and lost as much as 223 points Thursday, falling below the 7,882.51 trading low seen on Oct. 10.

Broader stock indicators also fell. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 21.47, or 2.66 percent, to 785.11, while the Nasdaq composite index declined 19.75, or 1.42 percent, to 1,366.67.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies fell 11.65, or 2.83 percent, to 400.73.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers by about 5 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume came to 1.39 billion shares.

Bond prices rose as investors sought the safety of government debt. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell to 3.14 percent from 3.32 percent late Wednesday. Bond yields move opposite their price. The yield on the three-month Treasury bill, considered one of the safest assets around, fell to 0.03 percent from 0.06 percent late Wednesday.

Light, sweet crude fell $4.92 to $48.70 on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The dollar was mixed against other major currencies, while gold prices rose.

Investors who have been groping for a bottom to the yearlong market rout have been worried that Washington's disagreements over whether to bail out the auto industry could lead to bankruptcy of major automakers such as General Motors Corp. and could send ripple effects through the economy -- including a further blow to consumer confidence.

With some hopes that a deal could be reached automakers reversed steep losses. General Motors rose 17 cents, or 6.5 percent, to $2.96, while Ford Motor Co. rose 18 cents, or 14.3 percent, to $1.44. Chrysler LLC isn't publicly traded.

Overseas, Japan's Nikkei stock average fell 6.9 percent, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index slid 4.04 percent. Britain's FTSE 100 fell 3.26 percent, Germany's DAX index fell 3.08 percent, and France's CAC-40 fell 3.48 percent.

New York Stock Exchange: http://www.nyse.com

Nasdaq Stock Market: http://www.nasdaq.com

 

   
 
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Posted on Thursday, November 20, 2008 at 03:59PM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

Solar cooler on sale now 295. delivered call 352-688-7269 ,I cut my elecric bill in half

Posted on Thursday, November 20, 2008 at 11:37AM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

Corker pops big 3 executives

Big 3 carmakers beg for $25 billion as aid stalls

WASHINGTON – Detroit's Big Three automakers pleaded with a reluctant Congress Tuesday for a $25 billion lifeline to save the once-proud titans of U.S. industry, pointedly warning of a national economic catastrophe should they collapse.

Millions of layoffs would follow their demise, they said, as damaging effects rippled across an already-faltering economy.

But the new rescue plan appeared stalled on Capitol Hill, opposed by the Bush administration and Republicans in Congress who don't want to dip into the Treasury Department's $700 billion financial bailout program to come up with the $25 billion in loans.

"Our industry ... needs a bridge to span the financial chasm that has opened up before us," General Motors Corp. CEO Rick Wagoner told the Senate Banking Committee. He blamed the industry's predicament not on management failures but on the deepening global financial crisis.

And Robert Nardelli, CEO of Chrysler LLC, told the panel the bailout would be "the least costly alternative" when compared with damage from bankruptcy.

Sympathy for the industry was sparse, with bailout fatigue dominating Capitol Hill. Lawmakers bristled with pent-up criticism of the auto industry, and questioned whether a stopgap loan would really cure what ails the companies.

Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., told the leaders of GM, Chrysler and Ford Motor Co. that the industry was "seeking treatments for wounds that I believe to a large extent were self-inflicted."

Still, he said, "At a time like this, when our economic future is so tenuous, we must do all we can to ensure stability."

Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., complained that the larger financial crisis "is not the only reason why the domestic auto industry is in trouble."

He cited "inefficient production" and "costly labor agreements" that put the U.S. automakers at a disadvantage to foreign companies.

Ford CEO Alan Mulally told senators the auto industry was "a pillar of our economy. We look forward to working with you to be part of the solution" to the financial crisis.

GM's Wagoner said that despite some public perceptions that his company was not keeping pace with the times and technological changes, "we've moved aggressively in recent years to position GM for long-term success. And we were well on the road to turning our North American business around."

"What exposes us to failure now is the global financial crisis, which has severely restricted credit availability and reduced industry sales to the lowest per-capita level since World War II."

Failure of the auto industry "would be catastrophic," he said, resulting in three million jobs lost within the first year and "economic devastation (that) would far exceed the government support that our industry needs to weather the current crisis."

Chrysler's Nardelli sought to respond to critics who suggest the automakers seek Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, as have some airlines that later emerged restructured and leaner.

"We just cannot be confident that we will be able to successfully emerge from bankruptcy," Nardelli said.

Chrysler was bailed out by the federal government once before, in 1979, with $1.2 billion in loan guarantees. The company repaid the loan, plus interest, ahead of schedule.

The three said a $25 billion government infusion could get them through 2009, with Chrysler and Ford each getting about $7 billion and GM needing $10 billion to $12 billion to pull through.

Joining the Big Three CEOs, Ron Gettelfinger, president of the United Auto Workers union, said the emergency loans were important for the survival of the industry and union jobs. He said the UAW recognized that "in order for these companies to be competitive, we had to make tough calls" in labor concessions.

Congressional leaders worked behind the scenes trying to hammer out a compromise that could speed some aid to the automakers before year's end. But the outlook seemed poor.

"My sense is that nothing's going to happen this week," Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., said at the opening of the hearing.

Democratic Sen. Max Baucus of Montana said he also smelled a flameout. "I sense that nothing is going to be passed," the Finance Committee chairman said.

Earlier, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said Congress might have to return in December — rather than adjourning for the year this week, as expected — to consider an auto bailout.

"Dealing with the automobile crisis is a pressing need. We are talking about a lot of people ... and a great consequence to our economy," said Hoyer, D-Md.

The financial situation for the automakers grows more precarious by the day. Cash-strapped GM said it will delay reimbursing its dealers for rebates and other sales incentives and could run out of cash by year's end without government aid.

In the Senate, Democrats discussed but rejected the option favored by the White House and GOP lawmakers to let the auto industry use a $25 billion loan program created by Congress in September — designed to help the companies develop more fuel-efficient vehicles — to tide them over financially until President-elect Barack Obama takes office.

"There is a way to do this," said Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., the minority leader.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and other senior Democrats, who count environmental groups among their strongest supporters, have vehemently opposed that approach because it would divert federal money that was supposed to go toward the development of vehicles that use less gasoline.

"I don't think that's going very far in our caucus," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.

Instead, they want to draw the $25 billion directly from the $700 billion Wall Street bailout — bringing the government's total aid to the car companies to $50 billion.

A Senate vote on that plan, which would also extend jobless benefits, could come as early as Thursday, but it currently lacks the support to advance. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson renewed the administration's opposition on Tuesday.

Even the car companies' strongest supporters conceded Tuesday that changing the terms of the fuel-efficiency loan program might be the only way to secure funding for them with Congress set to depart for the year and the firms in tough financial shape.

"While I believe we have to have retooling going into next year, if in the short run the only way we have to be able to get some immediate help is to take a portion of that, I would very reluctantly do that — but only because I believe President-elect Obama is going to be focused on retooling and on a manufacturing strategy next year," said Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich.

The White House said the government shouldn't send any more money to the struggling auto industry on top of the already-approved loans.

"We don't think that taxpayers should be asked to throw money at a company that can't prove that it has a long-term path for success," said White House Press Secretary Dana Perino.

Posted on Wednesday, November 19, 2008 at 04:17PM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

mAFIA BOSS PAULSON ? wE CALL FOR A CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION OF hANK PAULSON

Tulsa World.com 

Inhofe: Cancel the 'blank check'

11/16/2008  12:00 AM

He criticizes Henry Paulson for changing the $700 billion bailout plan.



WASHINGTON — U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe said Saturday that Congress was not told the truth about the bailout of the nation's financial system and should take back what is left of the $700 billion "blank check'' it gave the Bush administration.

"It is just outrageous that the American people don't know that Congress doesn't know how much money he (Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson) has given away to anyone,'' the Oklahoma Republican told the Tulsa World.

"It could be to his friends. It could be to anybody else. We don't know. There is no way of knowing.''

Inhofe's comments, unusually pointed even for a senator known for being blunt, come on the heels of Paulson's shift in how he thinks the bailout funds should be spent.

Last week the Treasury secretary announced he was abandoning his plan to free up the nation's credit system by buying up toxic assets from troubled financial institutions. Instead, Paulson wants to take a more direct action on the consumer credit front.

"He was able to get this authority from Congress predicated on what he was going to do, and then he didn't do it,'' Inhofe said.

"So, that's enough reason right there.''

Inhofe recalled earlier comments opposing Paulson's plan because the administration's point man did not have answers for a number of questions. He also recalled questioning the rush to get the bailout passed.

"I have learned a long time ago. When they come up and say this has to be done and has to be done immediately, there is no other way of doing it, you have to sit back and take a deep breath and nine times out of 10 they are not telling the truth,'' he said.

"And this is one of those nine times.''

Inhofe has laid out his legislative plans for this week on the bailout package in a letter to his Senate colleagues.

He wants to freeze what is left of the initial $350 billion — reportedly $60 billion, but Inhofe concedes he does not know for sure.

Then he wants a provision requiring an affirmative vote by Congress before Paulson can get his hands on the second $350 billion of bailout money.

Current law lays out a scenario where President Bush submits a plan on the second half of the funding.

Lawmakers have 15 days to disapprove it, but Inhofe questions that wording.

"Congress abdicated its constitutional responsibility by signing a truly blank check over to the Treasury Secretary,'' he wrote.

"However, the lame duck session of Congress offers us a tremendous opportunity to change course. We should take it.''

In the interview, the senator said his plans can provide "redemption'' for those senators who supported Paulson.

Inhofe's plan appears to be a long shot at this point. Senators originally approved the bailout plan by a 74-25 vote.

He does not know how much support he has among his Republican colleagues, and he concedes Democratic leaders could block it.

Bush also could veto it if it were to make it out of Congress.

Neither Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's office nor the Treasury Department commented.

Reid, D-Nev., wants to use the upcoming lame duck session to push economic issues such as extending unemployment benefits and aid to the nation's ailing auto industry.

Inhofe opposes both.

"You don't stimulate the economy by giving away more money,'' he said.

In response to concerns expressed by some that allowing even one of the big automakers to fail would be too much of an economic hit for the nation, Inhofe said reality must be accepted.

"If we keep on nursing a broken system, then we can't expect to have a different result come later on,'' he said.

"I just think we have to draw the line someplace, and the time is here.''
Posted on Monday, November 17, 2008 at 01:03PM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

Big electric rate increases across the usa...fight back

Florida power companies get OK for rate hikes

4 Florida power companies get 5 to 25 percent rate increases due to rising fuel costs

NEW YORK  - Four of Florida's five investor-owned power companies received approval for monthly rate increases of 5 to 25 percent due to rising fuel costs.

The Public Service Commission on Wednesday ordered that the new rates go into effect in January.

Customers of Progress Energy Florida Inc. in central and north Florida will get the biggest increase _ 25 percent. Rates will go up 11 percent for Florida Public Utilities Co. customers in the Marianna area and 5 percent in Fernandina Beach.

The others are 12 percent for Tampa Electric Co., and 9 percent for Gulf Power Co., which covers the western Panhandle.

The commission delayed a decision on a rate increase for the state's biggest electric utility, Florida Power & Light Co., which serves South Florida and most of the state's east coast.

Here's how the rates will affect total bills for customers using 1,000 kilowatt hours per month, which is just under the average for residential customers:

_ Progress Energy, up by $27.28 to $137.87.

_ Teco Energy subsidiary Tampa Electric, up by $14.06 to $128.44

_ Southern Co.-owned Gulf Power, up by $10.47 to $124.23.

_ Florida Public Utilities, up by $13.26 to $136.71 (Marianna) and up by $5.95 to $11.39

Posted on Saturday, November 15, 2008 at 11:05AM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

Palin slams bogus bailout

MIAMI, Florida  -- Former Republican vice presidential nominee Gov. Sarah Palin sharply questioned expanding the federal economic bailout plan Thursday during her first extended remarks since the end of the presidential campaign.

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin talks to reporters at the GOP governors' group meeting Thursday in Miami, Florida.

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin talks to reporters at the GOP governors' group meeting Thursday in Miami, Florida.

Addressing fellow GOP governors and party leaders at the Republican Governors Association convention in Miami, Florida, Palin criticized the growing list of industries and others seeking federal assistance.

"We're hearing now more talk of additional taxpayer bailouts ... for companies, for corporations, perhaps even states now who may be standing in line with their hands out despite, perhaps, some poor management decisions on their part that helped tank our economy," she said.

Palin stressed the need for what she called greater economic "accountability and personal responsibility" while urging "conservative solutions to these economic challenges."

At a press conference earlier Thursday, Palin said that she and her fellow Republican governors were ready to put aside "extreme partisanship" and act if Washington fails to provide the leadership America needs.

Posted on Thursday, November 13, 2008 at 05:57PM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

Dow moves into 7000's

I guess the market doesn't like the Paulson Bait and Switch, where is congress on this ?

Posted on Thursday, November 13, 2008 at 01:17PM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

New Jobless Claims Pass 500,000 to 7-Year High

Cant Pres. "ruler" Obama just fart and make money appear ?

Posted on Thursday, November 13, 2008 at 11:35AM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

one bad pig

Posted on Thursday, November 13, 2008 at 09:23AM by Registered CommenterThinker | Comments1 Comment

Gays gone wild

Posted on Thursday, November 13, 2008 at 09:20AM by Registered CommenterThinker | Comments1 Comment

Sara Palin is cause many women to see guns in a new light

Posted on Thursday, November 13, 2008 at 09:15AM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

Ar-15s can be had for $595 get them while you still can

WEAPONS OF CHOICE

Obama election triggers national gun rush, Obama to seize your guns America

FBI reports 49% increase in firearm background checks in 1 week


 

Firearm sales have skyrocketed since Barack Hussein Obama was elected by the media, and many gun owners say they are concerned the nation's next president and a Democratic-controlled Congress will impose a ban on assault rifles and firearm ownership.

From Nov. 3 to Nov. 9, the FBI reported 374,000 background checks on people purchasing guns – a 49 percent jump from last year. Dealers are reporting larger-than-usual sales since Election Day, according to the Chicago Tribune. The rush to buy weapons is more intense than in the days following Y2K and the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Post-election gun rush

Dallas, Texas, gun shop owner DeWayne Irwin said the election, combined with an unstable economy, triggered a firearms dash at his store.

"People are terrified of losing their right to protect themselves," Irwin told the Tribune. "The volume is 10 times what we ever expected. It started with assault rifles, but at this point people are buying ammunition, high-capacity magazines, Glocks – it's all flying off the shelf. With the economy the way it is, people are worried about instability. They are scared of civil unrest."

Likewise, Manassas, Va., gun store owner Bernie Conatser told CNN firearm sales have almost tripled at his shop.

"I have been in business for 12 years, and I was here for Y2K, September 11, Katrina," Conatser said. "And all of those were big events, and we did notice a spike in business, but nothing on the order of what we are seeing right now."

Managers at a shooting center in Houston reported selling out of assault weapons the day after Obama was elected. It now has a month-long waiting list for weapons costing more than $1,000 each.

Colorado and Illinois are also reporting record sales. Zion, Ill., gun store owner Jerry Bricco said Obama's gun policies have his customers worried.

"We've had a lot of people concerned because our president-elect is extremely anti-gun and so is his running mate," Bricco told the Tribune. "They're afraid of future gun bans and what you will be allowed to get."

Posted on Thursday, November 13, 2008 at 09:07AM by Registered CommenterThinker | Comments1 Comment

EcoQuest Intl one of the best companies in the world

 

All in the Family
Scott and Amanda Mathieu built a family, a business - and now they have a family business!

Picture 1

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Scott Mathieu was 18 years old when his father died tragically and unexpectedly. Though devastated, he was in line to inherit his father’s very successful investment business. Unfortunately, an unscrupulous employee stole the client base.

“We lost our family business,” says Scott. “Instead of a very bright future, I was faced with a situation where I had no economic prospects and was forced to go to work right away.”

Scott wanted to go to college, but couldn’t afford it. He met his wife, Amanda, while she was attending a private college. When they married, Scott took the first job the temporary agency offered him - working on the maintenance crew - and stayed there for 10 years.

“In that time, I worked as hard and as smart as I could, but I could never break out of the maintenance department because I didn’t have a degree,” he says.

In that 10 years, the Mathieu family grew, and their stack of bills grew taller. They had six children, and they were struggling.

One day the young couple noticed that their pastor and his wife—Dan and Debbie Gibson—were living more comfortably than a church salary could afford. They found out that the Gibsons had an EcoQuest business.

Building their own business wasn’t fast or easy. Scott maintained his full-time job for another year while building his business.

In time, they traded in their rundown station wagon with its saggy roof-lining for a Suburban. Since then, they have obtained several large cars. Now they live in a big house with a swimming pool and a huge yard. Their lives have been totally transformed by their home business. Scott is an innovator, using new media technologies to reach more prospects and share EcoQuest.

But, the biggest moment in Scott’s EcoQuest story is when his son Michael, now 18 years old, joined the company with him. Scott has been able to give his son something he was denied—a business legacy.

“Michael just earned his bonus car,” says Scott. “He is building his own business unit, and he’s doing fantastic. I can’t tell you how it made me feel when he decided to join our family business. Fathers and sons used to work together in business in times past. I was denied that, but now my son and I are working together.”

More FREE Info

 
T. Scott Mathieu
Pres. Global Energy Inc.
Master Manager EcoQuest Inc.
352-688-7269
 

 
Posted on Wednesday, November 12, 2008 at 08:52PM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

Obama may steal all gold in the USA

The Gold Confiscation Of April 5, 1933

From: President of the United States Franklin Delano Roosevelt
To: The United States Congress
Dated: 5 April, 1933
Presidential Executive Order 6102

Forbidding the Hoarding of Gold Coin, Gold Bullion and Gold Certificates By virtue of the authority vested in me by Section 5(b) of the Act of October 6, 1917, as amended by Section 2 of the Act of March 9, 1933, entitled

An Act to provide relief in the existing national emergency in banking, and for other purposes~',

in which amendatory Act Congress declared that a serious emergency exists,

I, Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States of America, do declare that said national emergency still continues to exist and pursuant to said section to do hereby prohibit the hoarding gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates within the continental United States by individuals, partnerships, associations and corporations and hereby prescribe the following regulations for carrying out the purposes of the order:

Section 1. For the purpose of this regulation, the term 'hoarding" means the withdrawal and withholding of gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates from the recognized and customary channels of trade. The term "person" means any individual, partnership, association or corporation.

Section 2. All persons are hereby required to deliver on or before May 1, 1933, to a Federal Reserve bank or a branch or agency thereof or to any member bank of the Federal Reserve System all gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates now owned by them or coming into their ownership on or before April 28, 1933, except the following:

(a) Such amount of gold as may be required for legitimate and customary use in industry, profession or art within a reasonable time, including gold prior to refining and stocks of gold in reasonable amounts for the usual trade requirements of owners mining and refining such gold.

(b) Gold coin and gold certificates in an amount not exceeding in the aggregate $100.00 belonging to any one person; and gold coins having recognized special value to collectors of rare and unusual coins.

(c) Gold coin and bullion earmarked or held in trust for a recognized foreign government or foreign central bank or the Bank for International Settlements.

(d) Gold coin and bullion licensed for the other proper transactions (not involving hoarding) including gold coin and gold bullion imported for the re-export or held pending action on applications for export license.

Section 3. Until otherwise ordered any person becoming the owner of any gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates after April 28, 1933, shall within three days after receipt thereof, deliver the same in the manner prescribed in Section 2; unless such gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates are held for any of the purposes specified in paragraphs (a),(b) or (c) of Section 2; or unless such gold coin, gold bullion is held for purposes specified in paragraph (d) of Section 2 and the person holding it is, with respect to such gold coin or bullion, a licensee or applicant for license pending action thereon.

Section 4. Upon receipt of gold coin, gold bullion, or gold certificates delivered to it in accordance with Section 2 or 3, the Federal reserve bank or member bank will pay thereof an equivalent amount of any other form of coin or currency coined or issued under the laws of the Unites States.

Section 5. Member banks shall deliver alt gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates owned or received by them (other than as exempted under the provisions of Section 2) to the Federal reserve banks of there respective districts and receive credit or payment thereof.

Section 6. The Secretary of the Treasury, out of the sum made available to the President by Section 501 of the Act of March 9, 1933, will in all proper cases pay the reasonable costs of transportation of gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates delivered to a member bank or Federal reserve bank in accordance with Sections 2, 3, or 5 hereof, including the cost of insurance, protection, and such other incidental costs as may be necessary, upon production of satisfactory evidence of such costs. Voucher forms for this purpose may be procured from Federal reserve banks.

Section 7. In cases where the delivery of gold coin, gold bullion, or gold certificates by the owners thereof within the time set forth above will involve extraordinary hardship or difficulty, the Secretary of the Treasury may, in his discretion, extend the time within which such delivery must be made. Applications for such extensions must be made in writing under oath; addressed to the Secretary of the Treasury and filed with a Federal reserve bank. Each applications must state the date to which the extension is desired, the amount and location of the gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates in respect of which such application is made and the facts showing extension to be necessary to avoid extraordinary hardship or difficulty.

Section 8. The Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized and empowered to issue such further regulations as he may deem necessary to carry the purposes of this order and to issue licenses there under, through such officers or agencies as he may designate, including licenses permitting the Federal reserve banks and member banks of the Federal Reserve System, in return for an equivalent amount of other coin, currency or credit, to deliver, earmark or hold in trust gold coin or bullion to or for persons showing the need for same for any of the purposes specified in paragraphs (a), (c), and (d) of Section 2 of these regulations.

Section 9. Whoever willfully violates any provision of this Executive Order or these regulation or of any rule, regulation or license issued there under may be fined not more than $10,000, or,if a natural person may be imprisoned for not more than ten years or both; and any officer, director, or agent of any corporation who knowingly participates in any such violation may be punished by a like fine, imprisonment, or both.

This order and these regulations may be modified or revoked at any time.
/s/
Franklin D. Roosevelt
President of the United States of America
April 5, 1933

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Posted on Wednesday, November 12, 2008 at 07:17PM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment

holy bait and switch batman !

Want Some Government Money? Apply Now!

November 12, 2008

Ap_paulson_081106_main This morning Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson addressed a skeptical press about the latest plans for those 700 billion dollars that were appropriated for the "TARP" -- or Troubled Asset Recovery Program. Now Paulson says Treasury won't buy those "Trouble Assets" -- one of the many metamorphoses this program has had in its young life.

In the meantime, care to apply for some TARP money? Turns out there's a five-page, downloadable document to fill in -- if you're interested...here's the link.

And here's ABC's Dan Arnall on whether there has been, as he puts it, a "Great TARP Bait & Switch".

No Troubled Asset Purchases? Then what are they doing with that $700 billion blank check? They are buying bank stock, not troubled assets. We probably shouldn't call it the TARP anymore. Instead, they are focused on a capital purchase plan (CPP) which is the widely reported $250 billion plan to use taxpayer money to purchase a stake in banks. "By October 26th we had $115 billion out the door to eight large institutions," said Paulson. "In Washington that is a land-speed record from announcing a program to getting funds out the door. We now have approved dozens of additional applications, and investments are being made in approved institutions." When we'll get a list of those dozens of additional applicants which will be getting a piece of the $125 billion in remaining taxpayer case remains to be seen. The original CPP participants were told about the program at a closed-door meeting at Treasury and no minutes have been released on what was said during the meeting.

So, is this the biggest bait and switch in American history? There will certainly be critics who say that Paulson and the Bush Administration were disingenuous when they were selling Congress and the American public on the program back in September. And they’d probably be right. Paulson said today, he knew when the bill was signed the purchase of trouble assets wasn’t the right solution to the problem. But history will judge Hank & Co. on the effectiveness of their response. If the risks to the financial system remain low, the future doesn’t bring bigger bank and financial institution failures, and the recession doesn’t get too deep or last too long, then the quick pivot on this plan will probably go unnoticed.

Posted on Wednesday, November 12, 2008 at 07:08PM by Registered CommenterThinker | CommentsPost a Comment
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