Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Q&A: Could Sandy postpone the election?

FILE - This Oct. 29, 2012 file photo shows Vice President Joe Biden speaking in front of "Vote Early" sign during a campaign rally at the Covelli Centre, Monday, in Youngstown, Ohio. One week before a close election, superstorm Sandy has confounded the presidential race, halting early voting in many areas, forcing both candidates to suspend campaigning and leading many to ponder whether the election might be postponed. It could take days to restore electricity to all of the more than 8 million homes and businesses that lost power when the storm pummeled the East Coast. That means it?s possible that power could still be out in some states on Election Day _ a major problem for areas that rely on electronic voting machines. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

FILE - This Oct. 29, 2012 file photo shows Vice President Joe Biden speaking in front of "Vote Early" sign during a campaign rally at the Covelli Centre, Monday, in Youngstown, Ohio. One week before a close election, superstorm Sandy has confounded the presidential race, halting early voting in many areas, forcing both candidates to suspend campaigning and leading many to ponder whether the election might be postponed. It could take days to restore electricity to all of the more than 8 million homes and businesses that lost power when the storm pummeled the East Coast. That means it?s possible that power could still be out in some states on Election Day _ a major problem for areas that rely on electronic voting machines. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

FILE - This photo taken Oct. 30, 2012, shows a utility crew working on damaged power lines in the aftermath of superstorm Sandy in Berlin, Md. One week before a close election, superstorm Sandy has confounded the presidential race, halting early voting in many areas, forcing both candidates to suspend campaigning and leading many to ponder whether the election might be postponed. It could take days to restore electricity to all of the more than 8 million homes and businesses that lost power when the storm pummeled the East Coast. That means it?s possible that power could still be out in some states on Election Day _ a major problem for areas that rely on electronic voting machines. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

FILE - This Oct. 29, 2012 file photo shows people standing in line to vote during early voting for the presidential election, in Miami. One week before a close election, superstorm Sandy has confounded the presidential race, halting early voting in many areas, forcing both candidates to suspend campaigning and leading many to ponder whether the election might be postponed. It could take days to restore electricity to all of the more than 8 million homes and businesses that lost power when the storm pummeled the East Coast. That means it?s possible that power could still be out in some states on Election Day _ a major problem for areas that rely on electronic voting machines. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky, File)

(AP) ? One week before a close election, superstorm Sandy has confounded the presidential race, halted early voting in many areas and led some to ponder whether the election might even be postponed.

It could take days to restore electricity to more than 8 million homes and businesses that lost power when the storm pummeled the East Coast. That means it's possible power could still be out in parts of some states on Election Day next Tuesday ? a major problem for precincts that rely on electronic voting machines.

But as the storm breached the coast, even some of those intimately involved in the election seemed in the dark about what options are available to cope with the storm. Asked Monday whether President Barack Obama had the power to reschedule the election, White House press secretary Jay Carney said he wasn't sure.

Some questions and answers about what's possible and not when it comes to reworking Election Day.

Q. Could the Nov. 6 election be changed?

A. Yes, but it's highly unlikely, and it's not up to the president. Congress sets the date for the presidential election ? the Tuesday after the first Monday in November, every fourth year. Congress could act within the next week to change the date, but that would be tough because lawmakers are on recess and back home in their districts campaigning for re-election. Plus, it's likely that would mean changing the date for the entire country, not just those affected by the storm. What's more, Congress only selects the date for federal races, so changing the date would wreak havoc for state and local elections also scheduled for Nov. 6. States might have to hold two separate days of voting, which could bust state budgets.

Q. What about pushing back the election just in some states?

A. It's possible, but the legal issues get tricky. States, by and large, are in charge of their own elections. Each state has its own laws dealing with what to do if an emergency jeopardizes voting and who can make the call. Federal law says that if a state fails to conduct an election for federal races on the day Congress chooses, the state legislature can pick a later date. But state and federal laws don't always jive perfectly. Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell has said his state's laws don't grant him authority to reschedule the presidential election.

Q. Have elections ever been postponed before?

A. Yes, but not on the presidential level. New York City was holding its mayoral primary when terrorists struck on Sept. 11, 2001, and the city rescheduled the election. After Hurricane Katrina in 2005, Louisiana's governor postponed municipal elections in New Orleans after elections officials said polling places wouldn't be ready.

Q. Other than rescheduling the election, can anything else be done?

A. Voting hours could be extended at various locations. In places where electronic voting machines are in use, paper ballots could be used instead. Some areas also might choose to move polling locations if existing ones are damaged, inaccessible or won't have power on Election Day.

Q. Would those options create any other problems?

A. Lots. If poll hours are extended, under a 2002 law passed by Congress in response to the disputed 2000 presidential election, any voters who show up outside of regular hours must use provisional ballots, which are counted later and could be challenged. Sandy's impact was felt in some of the most competitive states in the presidential race, including Virginia and Ohio. The more provisional ballots that are cast, the greater the chances are that the winner won't be known until days or even weeks after the election.

There's another issue if poll hours are extended in some areas ? such as counties with the worst storm damage ? and not in others. That could prompt lawsuits under the Constitution's Equal Protection Clause, said Edward Foley, an election law expert at The Ohio State University.

Relocating polling places is also risky because it could drive down turnout, said Neil Malhotra, a political economist at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business. "If you disrupt their routine and the polling place they've always been going to, even if you don't move it very far, they vote less," he said.

Q. What is the federal government doing to help?

A. The Federal Emergency Management Agency's administrator, Craig Fugate, said Monday he anticipated the storm's impact could linger into next week and affect the election. He said FEMA would look at what support it could provide to states before the election. "This will be led by the states," he said.

___

Reach Josh Lederman on Twitter at http://twitter.com/joshledermanAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-10-30-Postponing%20Elections-QandA/id-530729be74af43a9b4f123b1ceaf5f90

supreme court summer solstice Summer Solstice 2012 Waldo Canyon fire nba finals K Michelle roger clemens

Monday, October 29, 2012

SEO 10 business thematic links pr 4+ | Internet Marketing | Link ...

SEO 10 business thematic links pr 4+ | Internet Marketing | Link Building | Marketing | SEO

Attention Scriptlance users, Scriptlance has been acquired by Freelancer.com! Find out more

XP Boost: Bid on this project now and receive +? XP!

(Limit: 3 per day)

Bids?
10

Avg Bid (USD)
$134

Project Budget

(USD)

$30-$250

Prepaid Milestone Payment

$ USD

  • Project ID:

    2601450
  • Project Type:

    Fixed

Project Description:

10 business thematic links from Business Blogs pr5+ or any authority sites. There should not be more than 20 outgoing links from this page.

Skills required:

0

Reviews

0

Total Projects

Clarity in Specification

Communication

Payment Promptness

Professionalism

Would work for Again

Open Projects

Active Projects

Closed Projects

Project posted by:

    Verified

    This user has verified their Payment method

+ Add a Message

Public Clarification Board

The Public Clarification Board is for Freelancers, and the Employer, to exchange messages to clarify the project.

You have to bid on the project in order to post a message(s).

0 messages

BBcode, for forum posts and signatures:

--> Have a subject that you'd like to debate that isn't about roleplay? This is the place.

First post: ? 2 posts ? Page 1 of 1

mairingrauld.webs.com/dragons.htm

Which one are you?

User avatar
dealing with it
Global Moderator
Member for 1 years



Check out the new subreddit I made.

reddit:ActualDragons

User avatar
dealing with it
Global Moderator
Member for 1 years



First post: ? 2 posts ? Page 1 of 1

Post a reply

RolePlayGateway is a site built by a couple roleplayers who wanted to give a little something back to the roleplay community. The site has no intention of earning any profit, and is paid for out of their own pockets.

If you appreciate what they do, feel free to donate your spare change to help feed them on the weekends. After selecting the amount you want to donate from the menu, you can continue by clicking on PayPal logo.

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

Our Sponsors



RolePlayGateway is proudly powered by obscene amounts of caffeine, duct tape, and support from people like you. It operates under a "don't like it, suggest an improvement" platform, and we gladly take suggestions for improvements or changes.

The custom-built "roleplay" system was designed and implemented by Eric Martindale as of July 2009. All attempts to replicate or otherwise emulate this system and its method of organizing roleplay are strictly prohibited without his express written and contractual permission; violators will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

? RolePlayGateway, LLC | with the support of LocalSense

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/Q5LYgZJC_nk/viewtopic.php

road conditions newt gingrich wives weather gina carano at last al green burger king delivery

T-Mobile to launch Samsung Galaxy Note II on Wednesday says leaked memo

1. Hughey2k2 posted on yesterday, 18:20 1 1

I'll have to check my local T-Mobile store early that day

23. richardyarrell2011 posted on yesterday, 22:09 0 0

300 Value plan customers 379 Classic/Legacy customers. I am a value plan customer and will picking up the Galaxy Note 2 on November 1st just as I did the Galaxy S3 on June 28th. I will sell my Galaxy S3 for 350.00 dollars..

2. Donforreal posted on yesterday, 18:33 1 0

I paid more for my Tmo MDA in 2006 but, in todays plethora of choices, I have to say thats WAYY tooo much money with a 2 year and a mail in rebate. Wallet rape.

6. remixfa posted on yesterday, 18:44 0 0

that's why you go value plan. what fools still buy phones for a more expensive contract just to save a few bux on the phone.

THAT is wallet rape.

12. bigforce79 posted on yesterday, 20:20 0 0

Actually is always cheaper to buy your phone on contract on tmobile cause its only $200 to terminate. This means that your getting the phone for roughly $500 and then you can activate it only a monthly 4G plan. Thats is how you save. Also buy your phone at costco, its way cheaper.

18. Lboogey6 posted on yesterday, 21:11 0 0

Prepaid doesnt get full access to the towers plus that's no d
Different than value minus paying all at once. Lets not forget truly unlimited only on contract why be limited to be afraid of a contract you can leave when ever

16. PersianHobo posted on yesterday, 21:01 0 0

plenty of idiots, trying to get people to go from classic to value at work is like rocket science to them. i swear if people got the phone for free and payed $200 dollars a month for a line...they would go rave about it to the world

17. PersianHobo posted on yesterday, 21:02 0 0

i love when they think we are trying to scam them and threaten us by going to verizon lol

3. scsa852k posted on yesterday, 18:37 0 0

This is confirmed for T-Mobile Retailers only.

4. PAPINYC posted on yesterday, 18:37 1 1

I can't take it anymore, the suspense is killing me.
C'mon PhoneArena, get us the release date for the other carriers; you know iLove you for it.

5. TROLL posted on yesterday, 18:38 2 4

Really let down by 250ppi. Shouldev had 400ppi.
And shouldev also be clocked at 2.0Ghz.

7. PapaSmurf posted on yesterday, 18:54 3 2

Clocking the Exynos to 2.0GHz is utterly useless. 1.6GHz on Jellybean is more than enough..

8. AnTuTu posted on yesterday, 18:57 3 3

@PapaSmurf:- He has got issues with every damn phone out there.
I think he should switch back to Nokia 3310 :p

20. TROLL posted on yesterday, 21:41 0 2

No i have a issue with speed. I would love to play and feel the power of A15 E5250 QC running at 2.7Ghz along with T657 QC overclocked Gpu to 567mhz. Why u guys like staying in second lane. I have a inteli7, at 3.0 8Gb Ram, where u press the Turbo button and then everything just Turbo kicks in.
Why is that asking to much?

14. Wiki_jaan posted on yesterday, 20:45 1 0

u shud read his name first than reply to his comment .... lol

25. Berzerk000 posted on 18 min ago 0 0

You don't need 400 ppi, silly Troll. Maybe they should've gone up to about 310, but that's enough.

1.6 GHz is enough as well. 2 GHz and you put your device at risk, only Intel can go up that high safely, wait for the Exynos 5 to have a 2 GHz phone.

9. AnTuTu posted on yesterday, 18:58 0 2

@TROLL:- Go and do some hands on Note 2 and then come back and do your useless comments mate.

10. PAPINYC posted on yesterday, 19:10 3 0

Hey, leave TROLL alone or I'll be forced to beat you up with my jAiLbroken iPhone 4; after iLocate you with my Apple Maps, of course.

Besides, he's got great hair.

15. Wiki_jaan posted on yesterday, 20:57 0 1

lol ......... ilocate ll show u iwronge location ........... lol

21. TROLL posted on yesterday, 21:44 0 1

That made me iLaugh so much; PAPINYC you bust and ryme some serious jokes bro! Cool for that. Nice one! ??

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/phonearena/ySoL/~3/tOGYVBX2VUQ/T-Mobile-to-launch-Samsung-Galaxy-Note-II-on-Wednesday-says-leaked-memo_id35786

womens final four josh hutcherson google april fools office space shell houston open mega millions winners anthony davis

Readers' Tips for De-stressing Thanksgiving - Mommybites

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://mommybites.com/col2/moms/readers%E2%80%99-tips-for-de-stressing-thanksgiving/

colts big ten tournament 2012 dennis quaid bruce weber fired notorious big biggie smalls lyrics azores

US and Iran: Could Romney be tougher than Obama? Unlikely

In the run-up to Monday?s debate between Barack Obama and Mitt Romney, the most disputed foreign policy issue hasn?t been Afghanistan, where roughly 68,000 US troops are still based in the fight against Al Qaeda, or the contentious decision by the Obama administration to withdraw US troops from Iraq.

As moderator Martha Raddatz said at the Oct. 11 vice-presidential debate, the biggest national security threat faced by the United States is now considered to be the Islamic Republic of Iran.

?Every American is less secure today because [President Obama] has failed to slow Iran?s nuclear threat,? Mitt Romney said at the Republican National Convention in August. The Republican candidate has since argued that Mr. Obama hasn?t been tough enough on Tehran, and he has vowed to institute a different, harsher sanctions program that will be sure to cripple the Islamic Republic.

But analysts, legal experts, and US-allied diplomats say that when it comes to sanctions on Iran, US legislation isn't expected to differ much from one administration to another. Short of conducting a unilateral military strike or declaring war against the Islamic Republic, a Romney administration would be faced with the same legislative options on Iran as President Obama, who has already administered them.

Obama vs. Romney 101: 3 ways they differ on Iran

Former President George W. Bush began implementing legislation for harsher financial sanctions against Iran during his last two years in office. After the 2008 presidential election, the Obama administration instituted and expanded those sanctions at a speed that has made current US sanctions policy on Iran the harshest in contemporary history. This leaves a potential new Romney administration with few policy alternatives.

?The only thing Romney can really do to get to the right of Obama on Iran policy is to say he'd bomb Iran if elected president, or would actively promote and pursue a policy of regime change,? says Karim Sajadpour, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. ?Given the misgivings Americans have about the Iraq war, I don't think those are winning talking points for him.?

Since Obama became president in 2009, his administration has used a carrot-and-stick approach with the Islamic Republic, practicing a policy of limited engagement while boosting the implementation of Bush-era financial sanctions against Tehran and enacting new, tighter financial restrictions.

Iran?s economy began feeling the bite of new US and United Nations sanctions during the last two years of former President Bush?s second term in office. When Obama became president, the US Treasury Department upped the ante on Iran sanctions, accelerating their implementation and obtaining concrete commitments from US allies and private international entities to institute them as well.

Obama?s administration has also been tougher on US allies, particularly in Europe, flanking traditional diplomacy with direct pressure for collaboration on Iran policy, according to interviews with western European diplomats.

?A lot of what has come out on sanctions is a result of what Congress is passing,? says Erich Ferrari, a DC-based lawyer specializing in US Treasury legislation and author of the first comprehensive guide to US transactions regulations on Iran. ?What Obama did was continue Bush-era policies and put them on steroids.?

Western European diplomats say Obama has been less willing than the Bush administration to engage in ?multilateral conversations? with Europe on sanctions, opting instead to directly pressure some governments and private institutions to agree with and implement Washington?s unilateral sanctions laws.

As a result, US financial sanctions against Iran ? now considered the harshest in recent history ? have during the last four years been integrated into the global banking system much more quickly and deeply.

The US now sanctions foreign companies that do not significantly cut or completely stop purchases of Iranian oil, and it penalizes banks engaging in financial transactions with the Islamic Republic.

Coupled with a European embargo on Iran's oil imposed in July, the country?s oil exports have fallen by more than 50 percent since last year, forcing Tehran to continue reducing oil production as a result of declining demand. This summer, Iraq out-produced Iran for the first time in more than twenty years, according to data from the International Energy Agency.

US banking sanctions have also hindered Tehran from accessing its foreign exchange reserves held overseas, constraining the ability of its central bank to defend the value of Iran?s national currency, which has fallen by roughly 80 percent since last year.

The European Union intensified its sanctions against Tehran last week, formally barring all trade and transactions with Iranian banks (except those with specific EU government permission), and tightening restrictions against Iran?s central bank, the National Iranian Oil Company, and the National Iranian Tanker Company.

In addition to sanctions, Iran has dealt with breaches to its security.

Since January 2010, Israel?s spy agency, Mossad, has reportedly conducted covert operations leading to the assassinations of at least four Iranian nuclear scientists, according to intelligence officials cited anonymously in a Time Magazine report. A wave of damaging cyberattacks targeting Iran?s nuclear-fuel centrifuges started in mid-2009.

?After this level of sanctions, the only thing left would be a real blockade of all communications,? says Roberto Toscano, who served as Italy?s Ambassador to Iran for five years until 2008.

Aside from a military strike on Iran by either the US or Israel, which could drag Washington into a regional war, the only policy option left beyond sanctions is diplomacy, Ambassador Toscano says, adding: ?If we think sanctions alone will make them cave, this is not going to happen.?

Follow Roshanak Taghavi on Twitter at www.twitter.com/RoshanakT

Obama vs. Romney 101: 3 ways they differ on Iran

Related stories

Read this story at csmonitor.com

Become a part of the Monitor community

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-iran-could-romney-tougher-obama-unlikely-180000165.html

andrew brietbart branson mo monkees songs danica patrick school closings top chef texas rail gun

Monday, October 22, 2012

St. Marianne Cope, Pray for Us

Mother Marianne Cope

Reverend Sister Marianne
Matron of the Bishop Home, Kalaupapa

To see the infinite pity of this place,
The mangled limb, the devastated face,
The innocent sufferers smiling at the rod,
A fool were tempted to deny his God.

He sees, and shrinks; but if he look again,
Lo, beauty springing from the breast of pain!?
He marks the sisters on the painful shores,
And even a fool is silent and adores.

Robert Louis Stevenson
Kalawao, May 22, 1889

* * * * *

Mother Marianne Cope is one of the new saints canonized October 21 by Pope Benedict XVI.

The new saint from New York was born Maria Anna Barbara Koob?on January 23, 1838 in Heppenheim in the Grand Duchy of Hesse (modern-day Germany).? When she was just a year old, her family emigrated to the United States?settling in the farming community of Utica, New York.

From early childhood Maria Anna was attracted to religious life.??Attending school at the Parish of St. Joseph, she admired the sisters who had devoted their lives to Christ. ?However, her vocation was to be delayed:? Her father became an invalid when Maria Anna was in eighth grade, and she went to work in a factory to help support her family.? At age 24, when her younger siblings were old enough to assume responsibility for the family and after her father had died, Maria Anna entered the Sisters of the Third Order Regular of Saint Francis, based in Syracuse, New York.

After one year in the novitiate,?Maria Anna received the habit of the Franciscan sisters and with it, her new name:??Sister Marianne.? She became a schoolteacher, then a principal, at newly established schools for German-speaking immigrants in the region.

By the 1860s, Sister Marianne had been elected?to the Governing Council of her religious order; and in that role, she was instrumental in opening two new hospitals in Central New York.? She was appointed by the Superior General to direct St. Joseph?s Hospital, the first public hospital in Syracuse, and she served in that role from 1870-1877.

Unlike other hospitals of the time,?the Franciscan hospitals stipulated in their Charter that medical care was to be provided to all,?regardless of race or creed.??She helped to further?patients? rights, insisting in a letter of negotiations with the Medical College at Syracuse University that it was the right of the patient in each and every case to decide whether or not he or she wished to be brought before medical students.? Sister Marianne was often criticized for accepting into treatment??outcast? patients such as alcoholics,?who were spurned by hospitals at the time; but she was well-known and loved among New Yorkers for her kindness, wisdom and down-to-earth practicality.

In 1883, Mother Marianne?by that time the Provincial Mother in Syracuse?received a letter from a Catholic priest?asking for help managing hospitals and schools in the Hawaiian Islands, mainly caring for leprosy patients.? She responded enthusiastically, writing,

?I am hungry for the work and I wish with all my heart to be one of the chosen ones, whose privilege it will be to sacrifice themselves for the salvation of the souls of the poor Islanders?. I am not afraid of any disease; hence, it would be my greatest delight even to minister to the abandoned ?lepers?.?

With six other Sisters of St. Francis,?Mother Marianne arrived at Honolulu in November 1883.? The sisters would manage and serve at the Kaka?ako Branch Hospital on Oahu, a receiving station where Hansen?s disease (leprosy) patients from throughout the Hawaiian Islands were sent to prevent further spread of the disease.? Within two years, the sisters had cleaned the hospital and treated the 200 patients, making major improvements in living conditions; and in 1905 they founded the Kapi?olani Home, a residence for the daughters of leprosy patients, within the walls of the hospital compound.? Fear of the disease had made public officials unwilling to care for the close relatives of those afflicted by the disease; only the sisters would welcome them and offer the home and education that these girls needed.

Mother Marianne Cope beside the funeral bier of Father Damian

In January 1884, Mother Marianne met Fr. Damien de Veuster,?who would become known as the ?apostle to the lepers.?? Two years later,?after Father Damien had been diagnosed with Hansen?s disease, the Church and the Government were afraid to welcome him; only Mother Marianne offered hospitality, after hearing that his condition had made him an outcast.? In 1888,?in the last months of Father Damien?s life, Mother Marianne became his caretaker?promising him that she would continue to care for the patients at the Boys? Home at Kalawao which he had founded.

After Father Damien?s death?Mother Marianne, with Sr. Leopoldina Burns and Sr. Vincentia McCormick, cared for 103 girls at the Bishop Home for Girls, and operated the Home for Boys.? Her cheerful countenance was an encouragement to the children and to the religious sisters in her order.? Never fearful that she would contract leprosy herself, she said,

?God giveth life; He will take it away in His own good time. Meanwhile it is our duty to make life as pleasant and as comfortable as possible for those of our fellow-creatures whom He has chosen to afflict.?

Mother Marianne Cope, O.S.F., never contracted leprosy.? She and her sisters were honored in the poem (above) written by Robert Louis Stevenson in 1889. ?She died of natural causes on August 19, 1918, and was buried at the Bishop Home.

On April 19, 2004, Pope John Paul II issued the decree?officially naming her Venerable.? She was among the first group of people to be beatified by Pope Benedict XVI, and is now often referred to as Blessed Marianne of Moloka?i.

Her feast day (January 23) is celebrated?by her Congregation, as well as by the Diocese of Honolulu and the Diocese of Syracuse.? Now, with her canonization, that day will become a day of celebration and commemoration for all American Catholics.

Source: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/kathyschiffer/2012/10/st-marianne-cope-pray-for-us/

blake griffin dunk on kendrick perkins kendrick perkins steve jones emily maynard kola boof burmese python national signing day

Russian activist claims he was kidnapped, tortured

MOSCOW (AP) ? Russia's top investigative agency announced Monday that a government opponent has turned himself in and confessed to orchestrating riots, but the man and his supporters said he was kidnapped abroad, smuggled back to Russia and then tortured into confessing.

The Investigative Committee said in a statement that Leonid Razvozzhayev admitted to plotting with leftist leaders Sergei Udaltsov and Konstantin Lebedev, and taking funding from a Georgian lawmaker.

Razvozzhayev, an aide to opposition lawmaker Ilya Ponomarev, was in hiding in Ukraine when investigators came to search homes of Udaltsov and Lebedev last week. The activist's supporters reported over the weekend that he had been kidnapped in Ukraine by Russian security officers outside a U.N. office where he was going to apply for political asylum.

A video published on the LifeNews.ru website showed Razvozzhayev being taken away from a courthouse Sunday evening after the court sanctioned his arrest. Razvozzhayev shouted to reporters: "Tell everyone that they tortured me. For two days. They smuggled me in from Ukraine."

The Investigative Committee denied his claims, insisting that Razvozzhayev himself penned a 10-page confession.

The criminal case against the three activists is based on alleged hidden camera footage aired earlier this month by a Kremlin-friendly TV channel. The documentary claimed that they met with Georgian officials to raise money to overthrow Putin's government.

The quality of the footage is poor, but investigators insist that it was not doctored.

Investigators said Monday that Razvozzhayev also talked about his involvement in "organizing" clashes between police and protesters in May in Moscow, and said this was funded by Georgian lawmaker Givi Targamadze.

Targamadze has denied any links to funding the Russian opposition.

An opposition rally on May 6 in Moscow turned violent after police restricted access to the square where the rally was to be held. Bottles and pieces of asphalt were hurled at riot police who struck back by beating protesters with truncheons. The clashes did not appear to have been orchestrated.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russian-activist-claims-kidnapped-tortured-105042632.html

i want to know what love is courtney mercury retrograde bath salts heart shaped box lucid 2012 ncaa tournament bracket

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Set aside debate over Romney tax math: Is tax reform a good idea?

The momentous policy challenge of how to fix America's dysfunctional tax system has been largely obscured by the debate over Mitt Romney's tax math. But there's broad support for tax reform.

By Mark Trumbull,?Staff writer / October 19, 2012

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney speaks during the first presidential debate with President Barack Obama at the University of Denver.

Eric Gay/AP

Enlarge

One of the biggest policy questions at stake in the presidential election ?? how to fix America's dysfunctional tax system ? has become largely obscured by bickering over the budgetary math of one candidate's proposal.

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

The scrutiny of Mitt Romney's plan for a 20 percent cut in income tax rates is deserved. That's a big tax change, and he hasn't explained how he would pay for it at a time of chronic federal deficits ? which he also pledges to reduce.

But the legitimate questioning of Romney's math has to some extent short-circuited campaign debate over a much bigger issue: The US tax code is widely perceived as burdensome, as it imposes steep compliance costs and unduly distorts the behavior of businesses and households. Reforming it offers a promising way to improve the health of both federal budgets and the economy.

The big question is how to approach that task. Mr. Romney's plan may or may not be the right one, but his general idea ? lowering tax rates while limiting things like deductions in order to "broaden the base" of taxable income ? is viewed by many tax experts as one promising path forward.

Amid the din of dueling sound bites from the campaigns, some voices on the sidelines are warning that this bigger picture is getting lost.

"The real story should not be about one campaign nit-picking the budgetary impact of the other campaign?s proposals," Alex Brill, a research fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, opined in an online commentary this month. "Rather the real story should be about the substantive policy visions of each of the candidates."

Mr. Brill was aiming his comment at President Obama and his Democratic allies. Others have similar concerns about Republicans.

"Let?s all take a deep breath here," Howard Gleckman, of the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, appealed on Thursday after the Romney campaign accused the center of issuing a new analysis that was "misleading and deceitful."

In fact, Mr. Gleckman argued in a blog post, the center's latest research efforts "provide evidence that a deduction cap," an idea Romney has floated, "is a pretty good ... idea."

For the record, the Tax Policy Center and the American Enterprise Institute are themselves part of the fray over Romney's tax math. The center is funded by two left-leaning think tanks, and while it has a reputation as nonpartisan, its analyses have been used heavily by critics of the Romney plan. Brill, meanwhile, made his comments within an article that also sought to rebut those critics.

Three basic issues in tax reform

But both Brill and Gleckman are right that there's much more to debate than the details, or lack of details, in Romney's plan.

Basically, the idea of tax reform revolves around three issues: how to obtain needed revenue for the federal government, how to be fair (what level of "progressivity" to have in the tax code), and how to maximize economic growth.

Romney emphasizes the goal of restraining the amount of tax revenue the government takes, and calls for big federal spending cuts to avoid big deficits. He also says he wants the code essentially to retain its current progressive structure (with the top 5 percent of households continuing to pay a 60 percent share of income taxes). And he argues that simplifying the code, with lower rates for corporations as well as individuals, will boost economic growth.

He has brought the math debate upon himself, by announcing very ambitious goals (cutting rates by 20 percent would bring the top tax rate down from 35 percent to 28 percent) while leaving other key details unspecified.

Obama wants government to get more revenue than would occur if the Bush tax cuts all remained in place. On fairness, his stated goal is to keep taxes essentially the same for the bottom 98 percent of households, while asking the rich to pay more as their "fair share."

While his budget plan endorses the idea that tax reform can enhance economic growth, Obama talks more often about the positive growth effects that can come from government investments (such as in education or infrastructure) than from tax reform.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/QknPUPRGCC0/Set-aside-debate-over-Romney-tax-math-Is-tax-reform-a-good-idea

manny ramirez easter 2012 bachelor jeremy lin espn sassafras mardi gras 2012 the secret world of arrietty