Monday, July 18, 2011

Bring back any memories?

http://www.bizzyblog.com/2011/07/16/13-minutes-understanding-capitalism/

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And the MSM tellus more and more of the good things about this admin - good things??????????? Where and when

http://pajamasmedia.com/vodkapundit/2011/07/17/david-ignatius-ignoring-the-tough-questions/

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'Balancing' the Budget?


'Balancing' the Budget?
Posted by Karen Kwiatkowski on July 18, 2011 07:42 AM

The House's Cut, Cap and Balance bill expands the debt limit, suggests cuts without actually committing to them, and increases our already bloated military accounts while seeking to get the money from the social welfare accounts (already and always empty). Specifically, the House Bill plans to happily pay for a growing military budget ad infinitum, predicting and praying that the already lopsided and obscene "Pentagon appropriations ...[will continue to] grow..." The establishment Republican from the 6th District of Virginia (Goodlatte) is proud of his "conservatism," as are so many of the Republicrats. The bill should be entitled "Lie, Lay Low, and Rock the Status Quo." Or maybe "Con, Crap and Bull." What's so hard to understand about the message Americans (especially the younger generations) have for Washington DC ­ which is stop borrowing, stop spending, and just go away?

**JP** Daily Quran and Hadith


IN THE NAME OF "ALLAH"
Assalamu'alaikum Wa Rahmatullah e Wa Barakatuhu,

 

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Note : Read this column as well.



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Fwd: "Regulatory Reform at the FCC: Why Not Now?" - FSF Seminar Transcript Released




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THE FREE STATE FOUNDATION's 
Luncheon Seminar
 

"Regulatory Reform at the FCC: Why Not Now?"

 

On April 12, 2011, the Free State Foundation held a lunch seminar entitled "Regulatory Reform at the FCC: Why Not Now?" The seminar's purpose was to explore issues relating to regulatory reform and institutional change at the Federal Communications Commission.

 

FSF is now releasing a transcript of the panel discussion. The panel followed a very substantive opening keynote by Congressman Cliff Stearns, Chairman of the House Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations.

 

The panel discussion was moderated by RANDOLPH MAY, President of The Free State Foundation. The panel consisted of the following key FCC, think tank, and industry experts offering their views on FCC reform:

 

  • JAMES ASSEY, Executive Vice President, National Cable & Telecommunications Association
  • STEVE LARGENT, President & CEO, CTIA-The Wireless Association
  • EDWARD LAZARUS, Chief of Staff, FCC
  • WALTER MCCORMICK, President and CEO, USTelecom
  • MICHAEL WEINBERG, Staff Attorney, Public Knowledge

 

In light of the current heightened interest in Congress, the Executive Branch, and elsewhere concerning the topic of regulatory reform at the FCC, the panel's discussion, which covered a variety of topics, is particularly timely and instructive. Of course, the transcript should be read in its entirety for an appreciation of all of the views of each panelist. Nevertheless, immediately below are selected representative excerpts in the order of the panelists' presentations at the April 12 program. These excerpts provide an indication of the various perspectives presented at the seminar: 

 

JAMES ASSEY:

 

"[I]t's important that we from the outside recognize that regulatory reform is really not a criticism of this agency, any previous agency, or any non-communications agency. But it really stands as an opportunity to recognize that the world that we live in is very different from the world that was created when various regulations, or in many cases the statutes themselves were enacted...And in many ways, regulatory reform is a celebration of the fact that we no longer have to rely on the government to set norms, because the marketplace and social norms have graduated to the point in which they are able to guide the marketplace in a way that maximizes consumers' benefits."

 

"Particularly important in the [National Broadband] Plan was the emphasis on how critical private capital was going to be to achieving our goals, and a recognition that we were at a time where command-and-control regulation really needs to recede from the foreground into the background, so that we could unleash and continue unleashing the dynamic investment that has made such a difference already, and will continue to do so in the future."

 

"[I]t's important to have a strong regulatory screen that counsels against regulatory intervention.  Particularly where we see areas of rapid development in the marketplace, we need to be very careful before we decide to jump in because of the costs that are imposed by false positives and the fact that the marketplace often will sort stuff out.  And in the lumpiness and bumpiness of progress and innovation, there are tremendous consumer benefits that we don't want to stall."

 

"For some reason I think we have focused a lot on outdated regulations or statutory provisions in Title II.  And I think that that is fair...But to the extent that we have a tool, something that is a little bit more incremental in the ability to remove statutory obligations or regulations, it makes little sense to me that it be restricted to one particular type of service or another...We have a number of provisions in Title VI of the Act, whether it's leased access or PEG obligations, that date back well before the Internet was just a science project...So we have a chance, should Congress either want to address that directly, or through insuring that the tools that are available through the forbearance process, to clarify that we really shouldn't pick and choose between services when we're talking about regulations."

 

 

STEVE LARGENT

 

"Specifically, the Executive Order in relevant part requires each agency to -- and I quote -- 'propose or adopt a regulation only upon a reasoned determination that its benefits justify its costs, recognizing that some benefits and costs are difficult to quantify' and 'tailor its regulations to impose the least burden on society, consistent with obtaining regulatory objectives, taking into account, among other things, and to the extent practicable, the cost of cumulative regulations.' This is exactly the right approach. It is one that will allow private companies, like those in the competitive wireless industry, to focus on innovating and developing new products and services for consumers. We also strongly support Chairman Genachowski's directive to the Commission to follow the executive order.  We applaud this choice."

 

"[W]e believe the Commission has initiated several proceedings, including the bill shock proceeding, the transparency requirements of the net neutrality item, and a few other areas, that could cause harm.  And we're working with the Commission to address these potential harms."

 

"[C]urrent rules limit the use of spectrum in the broadcast television bands to provide over-the-air broadcast television services.  This despite the overwhelming demand for additional spectrum for mobile broadband services, and dwindling consumer demand for broadcast television services...That is why the FCC's effort to create a more flexible framework that could ultimately accommodate a reallocation of portions of the underutilized TV bands is so important...Government has a key role in coordinating spectrum rights.  But the wireless industry also has a tremendous record of investing, innovating, and meeting consumer demand...It has delivered unparalleled benefits to consumers and businesses across the country, with consistently lower prices and new and improved services."

 

"The Sunshine Act is something that the FCC needs to look at.  It goes to the kind of Commissioner that you would see nominated to those positions, if you were able to meet with your fellow Commissioners, even Commissioners that were appointed under a Republican or Democratic presidency...And if it doesn't work, then they don't have to meet.  But if it does work, they had the opportunity to meet.  Commissioner Copps' idea of having a bipartisan group that's meeting is a good thing.  You'd find Commissioners that were more in tune with policy that the FCC has responsibility for, as opposed to politics."

 

 

MICHAEL WEINBERG

 

"One of the greatest challenges that the FCC faces, especially since the '96 Act was passed, is the way that the Information Age and the Internet has changed what happens at the FCC. There are many more small companies that are not used to dealing with the FCC or 'playing' in Washington. They often do not have a Washington presence, and don't really spend a lot of time thinking about what happens in Washington and how they can be significantly impacted by the decisions made by the FCC...So when we think about reforming the regulatory process, one of the primary goals and one of the primary questions that needs to be asked is not 'Does this work for the people we know?' but 'Does it work for those companies, those people as individuals, those communities that we don't know, that aren't used to coming in and filing comments and filing reply comments and monitoring dockets and doing ex parte meetings?'"

 

"When people are outside of Washington, they think of the revolving door in this incredibly pejorative way...But inside Washington, many people have a much more nuanced understanding.  Agency capture is not something where there are people with cigars in back rooms, with boxes of money being passed around, plotting the demise of the public interest. I mean it simply is not that....Instead, it is a natural result of the fact that the FCC, or any agency, isn't that big of an agency.  The communications bar is not that big of a bar.  The larger communications policy world is not that big of a world...And so over time, you will develop personal relationships with the people that you meet over and over.  One of the things that you need to be aware of, though, is that that can influence decision-making in a way that is not necessarily directly connected to policy."

 

"When we get to the point where we have pages and pages of conditions, especially those conditions that by and large expire after a couple of years, it may be time to look at that underlying merger and say, 'In fact, this merger is not in the public interest.'...As a corollary to that, sometimes merger conditions are used to impose policy that is not specific to the merging entities.  Many people in this room will agree that that really distorts the regulatory universe, it distorts the market...If a policy is really important enough that we think it should be used in a specific merger and we hope that it will influence the other actors in that field, that's a time when we say: 'No, this is not a merger condition; this is something that is important enough that it is going to be an industry-wide practice.'"

 

 

WALTER MCCORMICK

 

"We believe that there is nothing more important right now than reform of universal service and intercarrier compensation.  These are the financial fundamentals of the industry, they are critical to broadband deployment in rural areas.  We commend the Commission for recognizing this and for taking it on."

 

"The Commission's goal is to advance broadband; but the statute under which it derives its authority is a narrowband statute...And the Commission's internal structure largely mirrors the statute, a policy-making structure that is built upon distinct analog, narrow-band technologies rather than the converged digital platforms of today."

 

"[B]oth the statute and the Commission's structure are built upon a framework that treats incumbent LECs from the standpoint of being dominant providers of voice service...Our bureau is the Wireline Competition Bureau, as distinct from the Wireless Bureau, as distinct from the Media Bureau...And as a result, we have a host of archaic requirements that apply only to us, as voice service providers."

 

"[W]hen Congress enacted the law with the forbearance provision, it was meant to take advantage of streamlining.  There was an understanding that there was going to be a lot of regulatory reform in the '96 Act, and a lot of proceedings were going to be implemented...It was intended to give the Commissioner an option to either grab onto forbearance petitions filed and make a decision on the issue...Or, if it didn't really rise to the level of having them make a decision, just let it go...It was also intended to impose some discipline on the Commission, so the things wouldn't lay there for a long time...The problem is that in recent years, it was viewed as a way of trying to get around having the Commission make a decision.  So as a result, that has tended to emasculate the purpose of the original forbearance section... This is another area where it really is important for Congress to redefine the mission."

 

"The communications industry and the railroad industry are probably the only two industries that are left, where the merger review inquiry isn't focused on competitive harm.  The inquiry is something else, where we find no competitive harm, but ask, "Is it otherwise in the public interest?"...The inquiry should be narrow.  It should relate directly to competitive harms.  It should only relate to competitive harms...I frankly don't think that there should be duplicative merger reviews...This is an area where I hope that the FCC would exercise restraint."

 

 

EDWARD LAZARUS

 

"[T]he Chairman has been focused on what I think loosely we call regulatory reform from the very first day that he got to the agency...From that day, it was a philosophical matter.  And based on his experience in the private sector, he has been focused on having open, fair, data-driven processes, and whenever we're considering imposing any new obligations on the industry, we have to be clear of why we're doing it, and what the relative costs and benefits for doing it are...That's how we've approached everything we do.  Now that said, there are going to be disagreements between the agency and the Chairman and industry about how that calculus comes out...That's the nature of what we do.  Those are debates that are really important to have.  But we are focused on doing that in a thorough and fact-based and open and fair way."

 

"When it comes to regulatory reform, we're open for business.  We want to get this right.  It's not perfect.  I won't pretend that it is...But I also think we shouldn't kid ourselves that when we talk about regulatory reform, sometimes it's code for disagreement over issues of policy and law; disagreements over whether a particular segment of the industry really is as competitive as some of the industry players would like us to think; whether regardless of a market's competitiveness, consumers are getting the protection they need; whether the statute under which we operate provides the authority that we think it does.  And I agree with Walter that this is one where Congress could well be looking to update the statute...These are good-faith disagreements.  They're important disagreements.  But they're not the same as regulatory reform.  We shouldn't mistake the two."

 

"We are engaged in a retrospective review of our regulations to look at the ones that may be outmoded.  It turns out there are some easy pickings when it comes to that. I think we've discovered that we still have some regulations related to telegraph services, which I don't think actually exist anymore. But we're really actively working on this.  We welcome the ideas, and we've been over to USTelecom to talk about this.  We do have this initiative that is very high on the Chairman's priority list for reducing the barriers to broadband deployment and build-outs."

 

"It seems to me that forbearance petitions ought to be decided on the evidence.  It ought to be a jump ball...But I'd also say, based on my years as a litigator, that evidentiary presumptions are pretty easy to get around, if that's the result you want to reach...What really matters is having fair and impartial decision-makers more than it is setting up a particular set of evidentiary presumptions...If people are calling it on the facts, you're going to, generally speaking, get good decisions." 

 

 

 

A PDF of the full transcript of the panel presentation, "Regulatory Reform at the FCC: Why Not Now?" is here.

 

 

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Re: Michele Bachmann's hubby is so gay!!!!!!!!!!!!

The ever so compassionate, faux pro-gay rights, lefty dooshbag, drops
his hand again.

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Re: Why Casey Anthony Got Away With It…

Because you can't prove MURDER without a CAUSE OF DEATH!

A gimme

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Joel Salatin on Twinkies vs Raw Milk

Joel Salatin on Twinkies vs Raw Milk
Posted by Karen De Coster on July 17, 2011 07:57 PM

Here's Joel Salatin at the 2:50 mark of the video, stating that he thinks it is pretty amazing that we have a government that decides it is perfectly safe to feed your kids ho-ho cakes, Twinkies, and mountain dew, but its unsafe to feed them raw milk.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w6YCuloesNc&feature=player_embedded

If you are the kind of person who delights in sniggering at boorish government propaganda, you might enjoy the FDA's Big Lie on raw milk vs pasteurized milk over at its corner on the web: " The Dangers of Raw Milk: Unpasteurized Milk Can Pose a Serious Health Risk." Remember that the FDA, a criminal organization that masquerades as a government agency, received its largest budget increase ever in 2009 (for fiscal year 2010), and this increase was dished out in order to fund that criminal organization's food "safety" initiatives, such as the monstrous HR 2749, the Food Safety Modernization Act. Those initiatives fell under the FDA's "Protecting America's Food Supply" umbrella (I do not make this up; see here), which is a large-scale jihad against consumer food choice and farmers and food producers who are not a part of the industrialized, subsidized, favored food machine.

I blogged last week about my attendance at Salatin's Field Day at Polyface Farms in Virginia. I thought it was incredible that whenever Salatin opened up to the crowd for questions, he made the very clear point that no questions were out of bounds - sustainable farming, government intervention, gay marriage, politics, religion, whatever. He's willing to put his mind and vision to any and all topics in a manner that is thoughtful yet wholly uncompromising.

Following my blog post on LewRockwell.com reviewing the Field Day, I received emails from other libertarians who were there, or who had family members who were there at the Field Day. In fact, LewRockwell.com's Karen Kwiatowski was also in attendance, and she's a big Salatin fan. I also received an email from a fella (I will not reveal his identity) who read my review and I paid a visit to his farm - in the same area - where there are more pasteured chickens and grass-fed cattle being raised on techniques and principles learned from Salatin. I brought home a gallon of the good stuff from that Virginia farm, a state where you also need to sell herd shares in order to produce and sell raw milk. Drinking this stuff is, as a friend of mine noted, like drinking ice cream. It is real and untainted milk as nature intended, and the "other stuff" you buy in the store is the result of government's tyranny sold under the facade of "safety." My car was loaded with all kinds of contraband moving across state lines back to Michigan: Raw milk, great Virginia wines, and guns/ammo, so it's a good thing I was able to speed along for 600+ miles undetected.

A few days after the event on my last night in town, I had the good fortune of being seated at a local restaurant (that uses Polyface Farms meat) at a table right next to Mr. Salatin, who was having a meal with friends and family. In talking with him, I discovered he was gracious and and passionate and never about being politically correct or trying to covey a "digestible" message. He is very aware of the Mises Institute, and after hearing him talking about economics and the entrepreneur in his many interviews and YouTubes, I was not surprised. We talked about social media and his potential for using that platform, as well as a few other colorful items. And there were no Twinkies or mountain dew at his table.

Re: German reaction to our debt disput - strange who they blame

I linked to the entire article in Der Spiegel.

Moe wrote:
> You really have to present the entire article and not just the part
> that justifies your opinion.
>
> The conservative Die Welt writes:
>
> "In this period of competing debt crises, America and Europe are
> looking at each other in amazement, with each side understanding less
> and less about what is happening on the other side of the Atlantic.
> While Europe's chaos is obvious to the Europeans and the rest of the
> world, there are few signs of self-doubt or self-awareness in the US.
> In the middle of the poker game between the two political parties to
> prevent a national default on Aug. 2, polls show that 77 percent of
> Americans believe that they live in the world's greatest system of
> government. Just as many are convinced that life is only worth living
> as an American."
>
> "Democrats and Republicans are so hopelessly embroiled in a religious
> war that compromise and pragmatism are just dreams from a far-off era
> of reason. … The influence of the Tea Party movement … can not be
> overestimated. … The movement sees traditional politics as corrupt and
> regards Washington as a den of iniquity. … They see the other side as
> their enemy. Negotiations with the Democrats, whether it's about
> appointing a judge or the insolvency of the United States, are only
> successful if the enemy is defeated. Compromise, they feel, is a sign
> of weakness and cowardice."
>
> When you sit in Europe and watch the Americans (The favorit past time
> of many Europeans.) you can not help but think that they tick in
> another way. For us, USA is the wild man in the desert with the bible
> in one hand and a six gun in the other hand. Americans are for
> overkill. You do not use a newspaper to kill the fly. You kill the fly
> with a 357 Magnum. It does not matter if the wall is no longer there
> as long as the fly is dead. Look at the Casey Anthony case. You want
> her dead and not just hanging from a tree. You want a stain on the
> wall as a sign of justice. When it comes to the debt situation in the
> United States you see this as a chance to chrush Obama. When he is
> chrushed, the Chinese loose 75 percent of their reserves, meaning that
> they can no longer sustain their economy. This means that artificial
> societies like the oil countries dependant on Americas momentum are
> also unstable. You can take this to any place in the world where the
> dollar controls the economy. This crisis started with Bush and Obama
> has got to clean it up. Here in Europe you really have to question
> the state of mind of a lot of your politicians. This is not like I am
> saying that we have it better here. The difference seems to be that
> you can take a nut case like Palin and make her president. In France
> we would accept that a Strauss Kahn rapes the hotel maid in New York,
> writes a book on social conditions of working class in France and then
> elect him. What is the difference? Strauss Kahn does not have an army
> that can march into Iraq to take over the oil fields, find no threat
> or reason for being there, and end up having to pay to get the Iraq
> back on it feet at the cost of the French taxpayer. In Germany, the
> American Boy Scouts are stronger than the German Army, but we have
> medical care for everyone who can drag himself to a hospital.
> The one thing that is hard is that America is 110 percent when it
> comes to doing something. I mean this in saving the lives of people in
> an area devistated by a natural disaster. The Americans are first
> there with a bang. You look up in the sky and see the Americans with
> 30 planes carrying food. Behind them are two German planes carrying
> food and one of the planes has motor problems. We can only hope that
> America is not 110 percent when it comes to destroying it own
> existance.
>
>
> On Jul 17, 3:48 pm, dick thompson <rhomp2...@earthlink.net> wrote:
>
>> *n That Case, The World Had Better Pay Up: *That was my first (and
>> admittedly ill-tempered) reaction to this story
>> <http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,774666,00.html> from
>> Germany.
>>
>> The mass-circulation Bild writes:
>>
>> "Playing poker is part of politics, as is theatrical posturing.
>> That's fair enough. But what America is currently exhibiting is
>> the worst kind of absurd theatrics. And the whole world is being
>> held hostage."
>>
>> "Irrespective of what the correct fiscal and economic policy should
>> be for the most powerful country on earth, it's simply not possible
>> to stop taking on new debt overnight. Most importantly, the
>> Republicans have turned a dispute over a technicality into a
>> religious war, which no longer has any relation to a reasonable
>> dispute between the elected government and the opposition."
>>
>> Because there isn't a nation in the world that is capable of mounting a
>> hostage rescue mission against the US.
>>
>> I might not have reacted so sharply to that collection of German
>> reactions to our crisis, if it were not for this fact: Not one of the
>> selections that /Der Spiegel/ published mentioned President Obama's
>> failure to /even present a plan/ to solve our long-term fiscal problems.
>> But it is the Republicans these news organizations blame, mostly.
>>
>> (Here's a description of /Bild/ <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bild>, if
>> you are wondering what kind of newspaper it is.)
>> - 12:10 PM, 17 July 2011 [link]
>> <http://www.seanet.com/%7Ejimxc/Politics/July2011_3.html#jrm10082>
>>
>
>

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**JP** This is worth a read. whatever age





Like birds ,lets us leave behind what we don't need to carry...pains, sorrows,grudges and fears. Always fly light . Life is so beautiful. "  -Anon.

 

So profound.........

 

 

 

 WOW!!! This is worth a read. whatever age

 


 

 

cid:92EF3A8484A64AD1A1341EDF3186E24E@HuntPC

When an old man died in the geriatric ward of a nursing home in  GRASS VALLEY, CA. It was believed that he had nothing left of any value.

Later, when the nurses were going through his meager possessions, they found this poem. Its quality and content so impressed the staff that copies were made and distributed to every nurse in the hospital.

One nurse took her copy to  Missouri.

The old man's sole bequest to posterity has since appeared in the Christmas edition of the News Magazine of the St. Louis Association for Mental Health. A slide presentation has also been made based on his simple, but eloquent, poem.

And this little old man, with nothing left to give to the world, is now the author of this 'anonymous' poem winging across the Internet.


Crabby Old Man...

What do you see nurses? . . .. . . What do you see?
What are you thinking . . . . . When you're looking at me?
A crabby old man . .. . . . Not very wise,
Uncertain of habit ... . . . . With faraway eyes?

Who dribbles his food . . . .. . And makes no reply.
When you say in a loud voice . . . . .. 'I do wish you'd try!'
Who seems not to notice . .. . ... . The things that you do.
And forever is losing . . . . . A sock or shoe?

Who, resisting or not . . . . . Lets you do as you will,

With bathing and feeding . .. . . . The long day to fill?
Is that what you're thinking? . ... . . . Is that what you see?
Then open your eyes, nurse . . . . . You're not looking at me.

I'll tell you who I am. . . . ... . As I sit here so still,
As I do at your bidding, . . . . . As I eat at your will.
I'm a small child of Ten . .. . . .. With a father and mother,
Brothers and sisters . . . .. ... Who love one another.

A young boy of Sixteen . . . .. With wings on his feet.
Dreaming that soon now . . . . . A lover he'll meet.
A groom soon at Twenty . . . . .. My heart gives a leap.
Remembering, the vows . . . . . That I promised to keep.

At Twenty-Five, now . . . .. . I have young of my own.
Who need me to guide . . . . . And a secure happy home.
A man of Thirty . . . . . My young now grown fast,
Bound to each other ... . . . . With ties that should last.

At Forty, my young sons . . .... . . Have grown and are gone,
But my woman's beside me . . . . . To see I don't mourn.
At Fifty, once more, babies play 'round my knee,
Again, we know children .. . . . My loved one and me.

Dark days are upon me . . . . . My wife is now dead.
I look at the future . . . . . Shudder with dread.
For my young are all rearing . ... . . . Young of their own.
And I think of the years .. . . .. . And the love that I've known.

I'm now an old man . . . . .... And nature is cruel.
Tis jest to make old age . . . . . Look like a fool.
The body, it crumbles . . . . . Grace and vigor, depart.
There is now a stone . . . . Where I once had a heart.

But inside this old carcass .. . . . . A young guy still dwells,
And now and again . . . . My battered heart swells.
I remember the joys . . . . . I remember the pain.
And I'm loving and living . . . ... . Life over again.

I think of the years, all too few . . . . . Gone too fast.
And accept the stark fact . . . . That nothing can last.
So open your eyes, people . . . ... . Open and see.
Not a crabby old man ... . . Look closer . .. . See ME!!


Remember this poem when you next meet an older person who you might brush aside without looking at the young soul within. 

We will all, one day, be there, too!

PLEASE SHARE THIS POEM
 

The best and most beautiful things of this world can't be seen or touched. They must be felt by the heart. 

 




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    Re: Stuff

    All of these are quite astute.
     


     
    On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 1:11 PM, ray <jr3901@aol.com> wrote:

    Ø      Tea Partiers follow the saying: Government can only do certain
    things.

    Ø      Liberals follow the saying: Only government can do certain
    things

    Ø      Revenue enhancement is the number one reason for traffic
    management. Safety is somewhere down the list.

    Ø      Lawyers receive compensation whether they win or lose

    Ø      It is a felony for a citizen to lie to the government.

    Ø      It is perfectly acceptable for a politician to lie to their
    constituents.

    Ø      Any law that includes a derivative of the word "Intent" should
    be illegal.

    Ø      Every government needs additional revenue

    Ø      Government spending will never decrease.

    Ø      The Congressional budget office has never been correct

    Ø      Beware of any politician who claims their job is to create
    jobs.

    Ø      The only thing protected by FINRA is FINRA

    Ø      When you pass a highway construction site ninety percent of the
    workers will be doing something other than work.

    Ø      Information is not as important as using the correct form

    Ø      HOV lanes cause additional pollution and waste gas.

    Ø      Never vote for a politician who has yet to hold a job in the
    private sector

    Ø      Politicians always leave office with more wealth than upon
    entering.

    Ø      If the government had never gotten involved in health insurance
    regulation there would be no need for health insurance regulation
    reform.

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    **JP** Help me to Buy generator

     
    AoA
     
    Can any one let me know the most reliable and low cost generator in 2 to 3 KVA. I think Honda is very expensive.
     
    Thanks
     
    Regards,
    NAEEM

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    **JP** BE-WAQOOF LOGON KAY DOGHLAY LEADER


    


     
    سیاسی عزائم کامیاب۔۔۔ عوام اور معشیت Ú©Û’ خون پر۔





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    **JP** Jobs in Pakistan

    Dear All

    Please follow the links to view the Jobs details. Apply to email address provided in Jobs detail.

    Engineering Professionals Inter state Gas Systems - Islamabad
    Monday, July 18, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/engineering-professionals-inter-state.html


    Director/ Senior Advisor at Public Sector Organization - Islamabad
    Monday, July 18, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/director-senior-advisor-at-public.html


    Assistant Liaison Officer at United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees - Islamabad
    Monday, July 18, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/assistant-liaison-officer-at-united.html


    Human Resource Officer at PSEB Islamabad Pakistan
    Monday, July 18, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/human-resource-officer-at-pseb.html


    Web Designer - Karachi
    Monday, July 18, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/web-designer-karachi.html


    System Support Engieer - Karachi
    Monday, July 18, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/system-support-engieer-karachi.html


    Faculty Jobs at HITEC University - Taxila
    Monday, July 18, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/faculty-jobs-at-hitec-university-taxila.html


    Chief Executive Officer - Islamabad
    Monday, July 18, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/chief-executive-officer-islamabad.html


    Professors at Government College University - Lahore
    Monday, July 18, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/professors-at-government-college.html


    Marketing Executives / Brand Managers - Lahore
    Monday, July 18, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/marketing-executives-brand-managers.html


    Cashiers and Store Officers at MAKRO Multiple Cities Pakistan
    Monday, July 18, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/cashiers-and-store-officers-at-makro.html


    Flex Engineer (Nextbridge) - Lahore
    Tuesday, July 12, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/flex-engineer-nextbridge-lahore.html


    Software Engineer (Nextbridge) - Lahore
    Tuesday, July 12, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/software-engineer-nextbridge-lahore.html


    Manager Admin (KFC) - Lahore
    Tuesday, July 12, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/manager-admin-kfc-lahore.html


    Sr. PHP Developer - Karachi
    Tuesday, July 12, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/sr-php-developer-karachi.html


    Area Retail Manager (Ufone) - Karachi
    Tuesday, July 12, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/area-retail-manager-ufone-karachi.html


    Technical Writers - Lahore
    Tuesday, July 12, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/technical-writers-lahore.html


    Senior Software Engineer - Lahore
    Tuesday, July 12, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/senior-software-engineer-lahore.html


    iPhone Developer (Nextbridge) - Lahore
    Tuesday, July 12, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/iphone-developer-nextbridge-lahore.html


    Assistant Manager Production - Karachi / Lahore
    Tuesday, July 12, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/assistant-manager-production-karachi.html


    Sales Engineer (Construction Equipments)
    Tuesday, July 12, 2011
    http://pak.jobsq.org/2011/07/sales-engineer-construction-equipments.html


    For More Jobs Visit our website: http://pak.jobsq.org/.
    To Subscribe our RSS Feeds add http://feeds.feedburner.com/jobsqpakistan to your RSS readers.
    Follow us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Jobs-Queue-Pakistan/204592479588642?sk=wall
    Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/pakjobsqueue

    Regards

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    **JP** Badbua moza





     

       






     
    WAQAR SHAFI
     
    I. T. PROFESSIONAL
    KARACHI-PAKISTAN.
     

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    Re: **JP** Insanoo ki Behisi...

    Doob ke mar jana chahiy is qoom ko is liy to kabi Zalzale to kabi Seleb to kabi taliban
    ye sub k sub allah ki taraf se aik azab he is qoom per likin ye pir bi nahi sodre gi



    On Mon, Jul 18, 2011 at 11:29 AM, akbar khan <marcykhan@gmail.com> wrote:
    Pata nahi k kitne log aise hi mar jate he likin is me sub k sub gharib log hote he. apne kabi deka he k kisi Amir ke aulad ko aise bimaar ya besahara nahi ? Q K pir fouran Rahman malik ya koyi ar maidan me aa jata he.





    On Mon, Jul 18, 2011 at 11:14 PM, Join Pakistan <joinpakistan@gmail.com> wrote:
     

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    **JP** RMO Positions at Burhani Hospital




     

    BURHANI HOSPITAL,

                      Pakistan Chowk, Karachi

                                 require

    Male / Female RMO's

                 for

    Medical/Surgical Wards

       Gyane/Obs Wards

     

         Evening and Alternate Night Shifts

            One year post house job experience

       Very Excellent Package and Bonus Salary

           Incentive for post graduate experience

                 Pick and Drop for Lady RMOS

         apply  at career@burhanihospital.org.pk

         or  Contact CMO or HR on  021-32212574,

               021-32623218, 021-32214418

     


     
     
     
     



     

      


    __,_._,___



     
    WAQAR SHAFI
     
    I. T. PROFESSIONAL
    KARACHI-PAKISTAN.
     

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