Archive for May, 2011

Hurricane relief, small business loans on Washington’s agenda: Record pace for disaster loan approvals continues.(Small Business Administration approves loans): An article from: Franchising World

 Hurricane relief, small business loans on Washingtons agenda: Record pace for disaster loan approvals continues.(Small Business Administration approves loans): An article from: Franchising World

This digital document is an article from Franchising World, published by Thomson Gale on March 1, 2006. The length of the article is 898 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Hurricane relief, small business loans on Washington’s agenda: Record pace for disaster loan approvals continues.(Small Business Administration approves loans)
Publication: Franchising World (Magazine/Journal)
Date: March 1, 2006
Publisher: Thomson Gale
Volume: 38 Issue: 3 Page: 34(2)

Distributed by Thomson Gale

buynow big Hurricane relief, small business loans on Washingtons agenda: Record pace for disaster loan approvals continues.(Small Business Administration approves loans): An article from: Franchising World

List Price: $ 5.95

Price: [wpramaprice asin="B000F4MCKM"]

[wpramareviews asin="B000F4MCKM"]

APPROVAL!!
3573013255 521fd87ff1 Hurricane relief, small business loans on Washingtons agenda: Record pace for disaster loan approvals continues.(Small Business Administration approves loans): An article from: Franchising World

Image by Rakka

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

101 Powerful Tips For Legally Improving Your Credit Score!

512qa1MaGCL. SL160  101 Powerful Tips For Legally Improving Your Credit Score!

Who Else Wants To Boost Their Credit Score To Repair Financial Damage Constantly Hanging Over Your Head?

I will teach you exactly how the credit bureaus do their business. I will teach you how to regain their trust step by step, and even show you a few simple tricks for being financially responsible. You can download my guide straight to your computer in minutes. Once you do, the tips and tricks inside will blow your mind…

Here is just SOME of the information you will find inside:

What is a good credit score? And at what score should I start to be worried. Even if you pay all your bills on time, you may still have marks against your credit. See why here. 3 top credit agencies and how to keep tabs on them. 4 ways the credit bureaus look at your lending history – and how important each view is. 3 ways to boost your credit score and it is not just paying your bills. 10 steps to protecting your identity from thieves who may destroy your credit on their joyride acros

buynow big 101 Powerful Tips For Legally Improving Your Credit Score!

List Price: $ 0.99

Price: [wpramaprice asin="B001DKA01K"]

[wpramareviews asin="B001DKA01K"]

Technorati Tags: , , , , ,

Credit Repair Success Strategies :101 Legitimate Credit Repair Tips!

41MiJZRBkHL. SL160  Credit Repair Success Strategies :101 Legitimate Credit Repair Tips!

Who Else Wants To Boost Their Credit Score To Repair Financial Damage Constantly Hanging Over Your Head?

The Secret Of Boosting Your Credit Rating – Finally Revealed! 101 Legitimate Tips for Boosting Your Credit Score!

We’ve all made our financial mistakes. Sometimes it takes a mistake to teach ourselves a lesson. But a few financial mistakes do not spell the end of our financial lives. After a battle plan is drawn up. After a few strategic moves are put in to place. After a few tricks and tactics are used to the best of their ability. It is possible to reclaim trust from creditors, lenders, and renters. All it takes is the right knowledge and a little bit of your time.

Here is just SOME of the information you will find inside:

* What’s a good credit score? And at what score should I start to be worried.

* Even if you pay all your bills on time, you may still have marks against your credit.

* 3 top credit agencies and how to keep tabs on them.

buynow big Credit Repair Success Strategies :101 Legitimate Credit Repair Tips!

List Price: $ 0.99

Price: [wpramaprice asin="B004W8CYDM"]

[wpramareviews asin="B004W8CYDM"]

OBAMA: COMMUNIST PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
5324533596 9952eb78c6 Credit Repair Success Strategies :101 Legitimate Credit Repair Tips!

Image by SS&SS
THIS IS A MUST READ IF YOU ARE TO UNDERSTAND THIS ADMINISTRATIONS POLICYS ARE FULLY BASED ON A SOCIALIST/MARXIST SYSTEM OF GOVERNMENT
THIS MAN IS A COMMUNIST THROUGH AND THROUGH
ALSO READ THE PREVIOUS POST TO THIS ONE

The Obama Vision

Book review of: RADICAL-IN-CHIEF BY STANLEY KURTZ, National Review

November 15, 2010
by Ronald Radosh

The charge by some conservatives that President Obama was and indeed still is a socialist has been met with disbelief or brushed aside as irrelevant by our liberal elites, most consequentially by the media. They have assigned it to the land of the “wing-nuts.” Even the conservative writer Andrew Ferguson could not resist throwing in a gratuitous remark about Stanley Kurtz’s new book, Radical-in-Chief, in a recent issue of The Weekly Standard, arguing that “there is, indeed, a name for the beliefs that motivate President Obama, but it’s not . . . even socialism. It’s liberalism!” For Ferguson, “unchecked liberalism . . . is worrisome enough.”

I have to admit that before reading and evaluating the mountain of evidence Kurtz presents in his book, I too was skeptical of the charge, regarding it as a somewhat overheated smear word that Obama’s opponents liked to throw out in the heat of political debate. It held no more water with me than did the epithets of “fascist,” “Nazi,” and “un-American” hurled at Obama by his angriest enemies. But Kurtz’s book leads me to the inescapable conclusion that indeed Barack Obama started out his adult life as a socialist, functioned within socialism’s orbit for decades, owes much of his political rise to the socialist community, and has never repudiated the ideology he adopted so long ago.

Kurtz claims that when he began research for his book he knew that Obama had had some associations with radicals like Bill Ayers and Rev. Jeremiah Wright in Chicago, but was dubious about the socialist label. These associations were brushed off by Obama and his supporters with such arguments as that he hardly knew Ayers and his wife Bernardine Dohrn, and, in any event, was only eight years old when the couple were engaging in their violent Weathermen activities. As for Wright, well, Obama just wasn’t in church when the reverend was damning America.

Kurtz wanted to find out whether there was anything behind the socialist charge by digging deeper and tracing Obama’s path to the presidency. He approached his subject as any good historian would, by going to the primary sources, looking at the records and internal publications of the many groups and organizations that Obama had been associated with: the Socialist Scholars Conference, the Democratic Socialists of America, the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee, ACORN, the Black Theology Project, the Harold Washington mayoral administration, the Midwest Academy, the New American Movement, the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, and the Woods Charitable Fund.

Kurtz traces Obama’s exposure to socialist politics and circles back to the early 1980s, when he was a student at Columbia University. A pivotal experience was Obama’s attendance at the 1983 and 1984 Socialist Scholars Conference (SSC) held in New York’s Cooper Union. (This was a world I was most familiar with. At the time, I was on the SSC’s planning committee, which was based at the sociology department of the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.) The SSC was attended by enthusiastic members of various socialist sects; there was in fact little scholarly about it. Most of the sessions addressed various pressing political questions: the state of rebellion in Central America, the strategies for moving America towards socialism, etc. It would be interesting to know what sessions Obama attended and why he went to it in the first place. After all, most attendees were activists, committed socialist intellectuals, or both.

The answers would never be brought forth, because no one in the media sought to ask him about it. Kurtz reports that Obama did address it once, in an offhand manner. In his bestselling 1995 memoir, Dreams from My Father, Obama wrote that while living in New York, he engaged in political discussions that “came to take on the flavor of the socialist conferences I sometimes attended at Cooper Union. . . . [They were among] the many diversions New York had to offer, like going to a foreign film or ice-skating at Rockefeller Center.” Since it was so inconsequential, why did Obama take care to mention it? Perhaps the ambitious Obama knew that since he had registered for it in his own name, someone might find he had attended; so “why not,” Kurtz writes, “acknowledge the fact in such a way as to minimize attention and defuse the power of eventual revelation?”

But, as Kurtz shows, after the SSC, where Obama was exposed to both Black Liberation theology and community organizing, he decided to leave the field of foreign relations and nuclear disarmament — about which he had written a now well-known article — and instead started on the new career path of community organizing. Moreover, the speaker at one of the major sessions developed the theoretical concept of working for “socialist incubators,” the effort to combine different community groups into one national movement, which would then “democratize control of major social, economic and political institutions.” This was not an old-style nationalization of the commanding heights of the economy; it was, rather, an attempt to achieve socialism from below. The theorist was Peter Dreier, who later became a major strategist for ACORN and, during the 2008 campaign, an adviser to Sen. Barack Obama. These groups, or “incubators,” would push the U.S. towards socialism and socialist programs like universal single-payer health care.

Dreier’s theory coincided with the popular view of the French Marxist André Gorz, who developed the concept of working for “transitional” or “non-reformist reforms,” seemingly small steps that would help destroy market capitalism and build the basis for complete structural change and the adoption of a socialist economy in Western societies. When a crisis finally occurred, especially a “fiscal crisis of the state,” the moment would be ripe to transform the economy into a publicly owned statist entity.

As the years went by, and Barack Obama moved from community organizing to Harvard Law and then back to Chicago, Kurtz shows that one thing remained constant: Obama continued to move in the same socialist circles that he had first come across at the SSC at Cooper Union. It was there that he probably heard a young Cornel West talk at a panel on race and class in Marxism, and was introduced to the father of Black Liberation theology, James Cone, the mentor to a minister named Rev. Jeremiah Wright. It was also at the SSC that he most likely came across a leader of Michael Harrington’s Democratic Socialists of America, the Yugoslav-born Bogdan Denitch, who wrote an essay on the importance of Harold Washington’s mayoral campaign in Chicago, in uniting the black and white Left in a new class politics that would produce victory and socialist momentum.

These ideas and theories motivated Obama and helped him choose his own career path — that of community organizing as the way to lead a coalition of blacks, whites, and Hispanics to create a socialist “redefinition” of America, with one caveat: The concept and advocacy of socialism as the final goal would consciously be hidden from sight. As Kurtz reveals, the socialist theorists openly talked about what they called “stealth socialism” or “incremental radicalism,” small steps that move the nation forward until the ultimate goal of a socialist transformation is obtained. One moves apparently without an ideological plan, but working for measures that will end with an irreversible move to a statist economy based on public control through groups run by labor and community organizations. As Kurtz writes: “Obama’s college socialism, the influence of socialist conferences on his career, his choice of a profession dominated by socialists, and his extensive alliances with the most influential stealth-socialist community organizers in the country give the game away. Obama has adopted the gradualist socialist strategy of his mentors. . . . Eventually, this will transform American capitalism into something resembling a socialist-inspired Scandinavian welfare state.”

With this fundamental transformation finally obtained, wealth would be redistributed from individuals and businesses to the state and especially to the public-employee unions, which would effectively run state and national governments. Seemingly minor adjustments would be the effective “non-reformist reforms” advocated by Gorz and others, and would eventually undermine the current system. When Michelle Obama inadvertently let the cat out of the bag and told an audience that her husband was essentially a community organizer using politics to achieve the ends he always wanted, she confirmed Kurtz’s analysis.

All of this fit well with the political strategy developed by the late Michael Harrington, the last socialist leader of national prominence since Norman Thomas; Harrington’s followers play a major role in national government and the Democratic party today. Harrington favored what I call Browderism without Browder and the old Soviet tie; i.e., working in the Democratic party with non-socialists, helping to transform it into, in effect, an “invisible social democracy.” The so-called Democratic Left — under the guidance of conscious socialists who assumed leadership positions in various mass movements including unions, women’s groups, and community organizations — would help to develop their programs until all converged to create the structural socialist transformation of society.

Readers of Kurtz’s book will see example after example of how Obama’s otherwise inexplicable actions — such as pushing health care ahead of jobs in a time of economic downturn — make perfect sense if he is acting according to the theories and programs of the mentors he took along with him when he moved into the political arena. By keeping his real views hidden — the chosen policy of the descendants of Saul Alinsky who argue for masking socialist convictions — the political organizers can push the country in a direction it may not want.

Once one realizes that this is indeed Obama’s chosen course, it becomes clear why, during the campaign, he went out of his way to downplay and deny his actual close involvement over the years with major socialist players. In his important and detailed chapter on ACORN, for example, Kurtz spells out better than anyone has how the group fought tooth and nail to get banks to lower lending standards and to provide loans for those without good credit and even without any demonstrable ability to pay a mortgage. The housing group, despite its many denials, is shown by Kurtz to be a major factor in the development of the subprime-lending spree that crashed the housing bubble. ACORN pressured the banks by pressuring the Clinton administration and working with HUD secretary Henry Cisneros. Together, they used a direct-action campaign to draw the entire financial system into unwise lending schemes that helped foment today’s housing crisis.

Not only did Obama work closely with ACORN, he also cooperated intimately with the quasi-socialist Midwest Academy. He had lengthy and sustained relationships with both Jeremiah Wright and Bill Ayers — who, Kurtz demonstrates, knew and worked with Obama way before anyone else imagined. Ayers appointed him to boards that, in turn, quickly acted under Obama’s leadership to fund Ayers’s extremist and Marxist educational programs, as well as the radical projects of his wife, Bernardine Dohrn.

Thus does Obama’s past explain his policies today. He adopted the ACORN leaders’ strategy of transforming the economy through expanding entitlements, and combined it with Michael Harrington’s plan to realign American politics through polarizing the electorate along class lines. By radicalizing the Democratic party — a goal already pretty much accomplished — he would have the ability, once in power, to push America to a left-wing “social democracy” in which business would be demonized. (This strategy is very much in evidence in the 2010 midterm campaign, with the administration’s noxious attack on the Chamber of Commerce.)

As for health care, Kurtz speculates that Obama hopes that if Republicans succeed in repealing the new law, the repeal will ignite a political movement of the Left that will further radicalize the Democratic party — a class-based strategy that would put into effect Harrington’s “realignment,” in which, finally, the poor and the educated middle classes would push the country to socialism. Thus public-employee unions, minorities, and the poor would stop the “haves” from running the country, and — as Obama told Joe the Plumber in that eventful campaign stop in 2008 — we would move to fairness by redistributing the wealth to those who deserve it and don’t have what they need. In the Obama administration, we have Saul Alinsky, Richard Cloward, and Frances Fox Piven’s advocacy of pushing the system to its limits united with ACORN’s stealth socialism and socialist incubation.

Stanley Kurtz succeeds, then, in showing the “consistency of [Obama’s] convictions.” Beginning in his college days, and possibly even in late high school, Obama gravitated towards socialism as the answer for America. His entire political advance depended upon the backing, support, and work of the Chicago socialist community. It was a stealth-socialist circle, carefully hidden from the public, but now unearthed brilliantly by Kurtz. With a “thoroughgoing pattern of deception,” he misled the American people into believing that he was a post-ideological pragmatist. “Obama has made concerted efforts to hide his socialist convictions from the voters who put him in office,” in a “systematic deception” that “corrodes democracy itself.”

For these reasons, Stanley Kurtz has written what I believe is the most important political book in years. I would go so far as to say that had he or someone else done this work during the 2008 election campaign, Barack Obama would not have been elected president — because it would have been clear that Obama is simply not who he claimed to be. During the election, Obama presented himself as a post-partisan figure who would unite the country and work with Republicans to find practical solutions to America’s problems. He would heal the country’s racial wounds. Instead, he has divided us. At a time when Europe is digging itself out from under the weight of its social-democratic policies, Obama is pushing us in that direction: out-of-control deficits, unsustainable entitlements, high taxes, and a sluggish economy. That is not where the American people want to go.

Ronald Radosh is an adjunct fellow at the Hudson Institute; Prof. Emeritus of History at the City University of New York, and the author of many books, including "The Rosenberg File;" "Divided They Fell: The Demise of the Democratic Party, 1964-1996," and most recently, "Commies: A Journey Through the Old Left, the New Left and the Leftover Left."

www.hudson.org/

progressive/liberalism explained for the simple minded (other liberals)

www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZrqdZFFb5c&feature=related

Technorati Tags: , , , , ,

HP 10bII Financial Calculator

HP 10bII Financial Calculator

414kUXDIdAL. SL160  HP 10bII Financial Calculator

  • Over 100 built-in functions
  • Algebraic data entry
  • Intuitive keyboard layout with easy-to-read labels
  • Adjustable contrast display
  • 1-year warranty

If you need to keep up with your fast-paced business courses while working and planning for your career, invest in the HP 10BII business calculator. Featuring over 100 built-in functions for business, finance, mathematics, and statistics, the 10BII is an ideal calculator for business students who want to get ahead. Easily calculate loan payments, interest rates, amortization, discounted cash-flow analyses, TVM (loans, savings, and leasing), and more. Statistical analysis is cumulative, and you can figure standard deviation, mean, and weighted mean in addition to forecasts and the correlation coefficient. Cash-flow analysis is register based and has 15 functions. The HP 10BII business calculator has an algebraic entry system and a logical and intuitive keyboard layout with easy-to-read labels. The LCD screen features up to 12 characters on one line of text. Small and sturdy, this calculator is easy to slip into your backpack or briefcase and bring to class or your workplace. HP of

buynow big HP 10bII Financial Calculator

List Price: $ 40.00

Price: [wpramaprice asin="B00005ATSO"]

[wpramareviews asin="B00005ATSO"]

The Spider Carpet and Some Thoughts About Passion
 HP 10bII Financial Calculator

Image by Boogies with Fish
www.messersmith.name/wordpress/2009/11/24/the-spider-carp…
Life is about passion. I can’t imagine life without a few things burning me up from the inside out. Love, art, service . . . the list goes on. I’m fascinated by the things that people do because their passion drives them to do so. Sure, there is often money involved, sometimes big money. That’s okay. It doesn’t detract from the amazement we experience when we see remarkable results of human passion simply because someone made a living from it. That’s a given.

From the 2 October issue of Science,  the a journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science comes this fascinating image and story:

A million female Madagascar golden orb spiders contributed their golden silk to this one-of-a-kind textile that went on display last month at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. More than 80 people spent 4 years on the work, collecting spiders in the wild, drawing silk from immobilized (and later freed) arachnids with hand-powered machines, and twisting hundreds of spider lines to make each thread. The 3.4-by-1.2-meter tapestry is on loan from Simon Peers and Nicholas Godley, who founded Lamba, a weaving enterprise in Madagascar.

I’m hoping that my journalistic license will allow me to escape the ire of the AAAS for filching their image and quoting a paragraph of text. I’ll give them a plug by mentioning that, if you’re a student or a post-doc, you can get a subscription for a limited time for just US a year. That’s 51 issues of one of the finest science journals on the planet. What a deal! I paid over US0 for my last subscription.

Let’s get the calculator out (can’t do this stuff in my head any more). Well, huh! A million spiders . . . I don’t know where to plug that in. Let’s set the spiders aside. I doubt if spider passion contributed much to this carpet (A Buddhist might disagree.)

Okay, it says that 80 people spent four years on the work. Let’s keep the numbers conservative. Let’s say that each person, on the average, worked 20 hours a week for 40 weeks a year. Hmm . . . 80 people times 20 hours times 40 weeks times 4 years . . . that’s 256,000 hours! A quarter of a million hours! A single person working 40 hours a week for 50 weeks a years would take 128 years to finish the job (check my numbers).

Think about that while you contemplate this rather sombre sunrise at Coconut Point:

Is the world any better off because of this achievement? Not a whit. Are a lot of ordinary people all excited about it? Probably not. Is it an intelligentsia thing? Of course. It appeals to rich folk, artsy types and science geeks. So, what’s it worth?

Well, (and you knew this was coming), let me tell you what I think.

Most of us face the daily grind and that’s about all that we will ever have. It’s simply too draining to exert much effort to pursue things which we may passionately desire to do, because putting food on the table and taking care of business is all we can manage. We need people who can somehow overcome these obstacles (no matter the means) and deliver to us remarkable achievements that inspire us.

Maybe they did it for money. Maybe they did it for love.

No matter. Though they didn’t know it, they also did it for me.

Technorati Tags: , ,

The Mortgage Kit: Select the Right Loan, Lock in the Lowest Rate, Negotiate the Best Terms

513OrRDgCnL. SL160  The Mortgage Kit: Select the Right Loan, Lock in the Lowest Rate, Negotiate the Best Terms

  • ISBN13: 9781419584367
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

Saving money.  It’s what home loan shopping is all about.  And nothing helps you save money and secure the best deal like The Mortgage Kit.  By guiding you through the entire mortgage process—from applying to refinancing—this proven bestseller is your one-stop mortgage guide.
 
Bursting with Internet information designed to put you in the driver’s seat, The Mortgage Kit includes an all-new, time-saving Internet resource guide, advice on applying for a mortgage on the Internet, and tips on finding a lender online.  And, The Mortgage Kit is packed with hands-on charts, graphs, and worksheets that have helped tens of thousands of homebuyers successfully navigate the mortgage maze.  Mortgage guru Thomas Steinmetz leaves no stone unturned by revealing:
 -Money-saving strategies for applying for a mortgage-Tips on handling problems that may affect mortgage qualification-Strategies on comparison mortgage shopping-The ins and outs of reverse mortgagesContrary to popular

buynow big The Mortgage Kit: Select the Right Loan, Lock in the Lowest Rate, Negotiate the Best Terms

List Price: $ 19.95

Price: [wpramaprice asin="1419584367"]

[wpramareviews asin="1419584367"]

Palin: “John McCain has been the consummate MAVERICK in the Senate “
2909731625 697b15f187 The Mortgage Kit: Select the Right Loan, Lock in the Lowest Rate, Negotiate the Best Terms

Image by elycefeliz
Barack Obama and Hilary Clinton recognized the urgency and seriousness of the economic problems months ago – and proposed solutions – while McCain failed to recognize the situation and did nothing.

www.nytimes.com/2008/03/26/us/politics/26mortgage.html
McCain Rejects Broad U.S. Aid on Mortgages
Published: March 26, 2008

SANTA ANA, Calif. — Drawing a sharp distinction between himself and the two Democratic presidential candidates, Senator John McCain of Arizona warned Tuesday against vigorous government action to solve the deepening mortgage crisis and the market turmoil it has caused, saying that “it is not the duty of government to bail out and reward those who act irresponsibly, whether they are big banks or small borrowers.”

Mr. McCain’s comments came a day after Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York called for direct federal intervention to help affected homeowners, including a billion fund for states and communities to assist those at risk of foreclosure. Mrs. Clinton’s Democratic opponent, Senator Barack Obama of Illinois, has similarly called for greater federal involvement, including creation of a billion relief package to prevent foreclosures.

As the foreclosure crisis has rippled across the economy, it has thrust itself to the forefront of the presidential race, with Democrats seizing on the issue in urging forceful government steps to alleviate the crisis. Mr. McCain’s remarks Tuesday, to a group of Hispanic businessmen here, signaled a sharpening divide between the two parties’ candidates, with the senator warning against quick, costly government fixes to a crises rooted in the private sector.

. . . Mr. McCain appeared to be trying to confront questions about his dexterity in dealing with the economy, a subject that he has admitted is not his strongest suit. But his remarks drew a quick, pointed rebuke from Mrs. Clinton, who criticized Mr. McCain’s hands-off, market-oriented approach, saying it would lead to “a downward spiral that would cause tremendous economic pain and loss” for Americans.

“It sounds remarkably like Herbert Hoover, and I don’t think that’s good economic policy,” Mrs. Clinton told reporters in Greensburg, Pa. “The government has a number of tools at its disposal. I think that inaction has contributed to the problems we face today, and I believe further inaction would exacerbate those problems.”

. . . Mr. Obama’s plan emphasizes making it easier to convert subprime loans to fixed-rate, 30-year loans, while requiring that borrowers have access to better data on loan costs and requiring greater scrutiny of lenders. On Tuesday, he said, “It’s deeply troubling that John McCain is suggesting that the best way to address the housing crisis is to sit back and watch it happen.”

. . . Overall, the approach Mr. McCain suggested is even more cautious about federal intervention than that of President Bush. The Bush administration is looking to lower down payment requirements, at least temporarily. Mr. McCain said that he opposed reducing the down payment required for mortgages backed by the Federal Housing Administration, a step meant to revitalize slumping housing sales.

The housing crisis has emerged as a dominant topic in the campaign amid a steady drumbeat of worrisome economic data. A survey released Tuesday showed consumer expectations for the future at their lowest levels in more than 30 years, and polls show the economy has increasingly overshadowed issues like the Iraq war.

Mr. McCain spoke at some length about the problems caused by lenders and by Wall Street, which bundled mortgages into securities that were chopped into pieces and resold to investors in the United States and abroad. But he did not call for any kind of legislative or regulatory measures to fix those problems, other than to say that the government should eliminate obstacles to the ability of financial institutions to raise more capital.

Mr. McCain said he favored government intervention only when standing by would produce “catastrophic effects” to the economy.

www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2008/09/18/amid_turmo…
Amid turmoil, McCain turns to regulation
By Michael Kranish and Farah Stockman
Globe Staff / September 18, 2008
Responding to the turmoil on Wall Street, John McCain said flatly yesterday: "We need strong and effective regulation." But throughout his two-decade Senate career, McCain has cast himself as an outspoken critic of government intervention in the markets, saying that he is "fundamentally a deregulator."

After saying Tuesday that he opposed any more government bailouts, he said yesterday that the government was "forced" to loan billion to rescue insurance giant AIG because so many of its customers were affected. After saying Monday that the "fundamentals of the economy are strong," he seemed to backtrack by saying he was talking about the spirit of workers, not the rising rate of unemployment or the plunging stock market.

"After all the years of tearing down the regulations that govern financial institutions, it rings hollow to claim that he will build them back up," said Elizabeth Warren, professor of bankruptcy law at Harvard Law School. "This economy is the direct consequence of the deregulation that John McCain fought for day after day, year after year, since the mid-1980s."

William K. Black said yesterday that he does not believe McCain ever shed his anti-regulatory views. "He still has ideological blinders on," said Black, who later co-wrote a government report on the lessons learned from theKeating scandal. "He took no meaningful leadership role to try to deal with the recurring problems, and that is why the current crisis not only recurred but has intensified to the point where they have severely damaged the global economy," said Black, now an associate professor of economics and law at the University of Missouri-Kansas City’s law school.

Another analyst said that McCain has waited too long to speak out on stabilizing the US economy. "He has been very slow to recognize the severity," said Desmond Lachman, former managing director and chief emerging market economic strategist at Salomon Smith Barney. "I think it has only been the last two days that it has finally registered that this is a serious problem," said Lachman, who is now a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank.

ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5iE2JCSH5p9r2GBkQWS9TWAMzmuvQD…
October 23, 2008
"I call on the administration to act now and buy up these mortgages and keep people in their homes," McCain said, then singled out Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. "And why is the secretary of the Treasury not ordering them to do that?"

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Yes, You Can Get Out Of Debt! A Guide to Understanding Credit Card Debt, Student Loans & Mortgage Debts So You Can Find Debt Solutions To Pay Up And … Recovery And Be Free Of Debt For Life

51jA9gN8BiL. SL160  Yes, You Can Get Out Of Debt! A Guide to Understanding Credit Card Debt, Student Loans & Mortgage Debts So You Can Find Debt Solutions To Pay Up And ... Recovery And Be Free Of Debt For Life

Yes, you can get out of any debt! Be it a credit card debt, a student loan, a mortgage loan or any other personal loan, there is a solution to pay them all up. It will take time though, several years for some people, but it is not a predicament that is impossible to solve.

Get that one fact straight before you decide on having a nervous breakdown or killing yourself because you’re on a tight spot about paying up your creditors. There are many ways and means nowadays for debt relief and financial recovery.

If you are determined to get out of credit card debt and to fix your finances there are lots of services that can assist you in choosing the many options that can be the right solution for you. You need just two very vital elements to get started and to successfully see you through your debt recovery program:

1. A strong resolve to fix your debt problems
2. A doable and affordable plan for your credit repair

You need the first because you need th

buynow big Yes, You Can Get Out Of Debt! A Guide to Understanding Credit Card Debt, Student Loans & Mortgage Debts So You Can Find Debt Solutions To Pay Up And ... Recovery And Be Free Of Debt For Life

List Price: $ 3.99

Price: [wpramaprice asin="B004R1Q64W"]

[wpramareviews asin="B004R1Q64W"]

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

School’s Gold – A Complete Guide To Funding A College Education

41NCpbVkF7L. SL160  Schools Gold   A Complete Guide To Funding A College Education

It has often been said that funding a college education is amongst the 4 most expensive purchases you will ever make in your life. The others are, of course, – A house, a car, and a wedding. It is also widely accepted that someone who possesses a college education is likely to earn far more money over the course of their life than someone without.

You will also find that the process of funding a college education is extremely challenging, and indeed stressful. Let’s face the facts, one of the major concerns that many people have, parents and students alike, is trying to avoid leaving yourself or your family with crippling debts before your working life has even started.

This is the exact reason why we have produced our fantastic guide to Funding a College Education. We would hazard a guess that the vast majority of people are woefully underprepared when it comes to the subject of college financing. We also truly believe that most people are not even aware of the various f

buynow big Schools Gold   A Complete Guide To Funding A College Education

List Price: $ 9.95

Price: [wpramaprice asin="B004RZ2WOQ"]

[wpramareviews asin="B004RZ2WOQ"]

Community College Students Need Federal Loans, Too
With the rising cost of college, paying tuition bills is a challenge for everybody these days. But students attending two-year community colleges have a much tougher time footing the bill than many of their peers attending four-year schools. According to the latest report from the Project on Student Debt , over one million students in 31 states attend community colleges that deny them the chance …
Read more on GOOD

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

BUY A CAR! – Bad Credit, No Money Down, Financing a Car, Buying a Car With No Down Payment, No Credit, No Money – Own Your Own Car

41S1aaPBzoL. SL160  BUY A CAR!   Bad Credit, No Money Down, Financing a Car, Buying a Car With No Down Payment, No Credit, No Money   Own Your Own Car

Are you Having Problems With Trying To Buy A
Car With Little Or No Credit? Look No Further This
Book Explains Just How Easy It Is To Owning
That Car You’ve Always Dreamed Of Having!

There Are Plenty Of People Out There Just Like You Who
Have No Credit Or Bad Credit. We Can Show You How You
Can Get Your Very Own Car In An Easy Step By Step Process
– Even If Your Credit Is Less Than Perfect!

For many people, owning their own home is the American dream, but for others, all they want is a good, reliable car that they can call their own. With the price of cars these days, you will probably need to get financing in order to buy your car. What happens, though, if you don’t have credit or if you’ve got bad credit?

Most people think that when they have credit problems, that’s it for them. That’s just not true! Today, there are many, many options to get you toward car ownership – no matter what your credit is like. That’s the good news.

buynow big BUY A CAR!   Bad Credit, No Money Down, Financing a Car, Buying a Car With No Down Payment, No Credit, No Money   Own Your Own Car

List Price: $ 5.85

Price: [wpramaprice asin="B004WKRUI4"]

[wpramareviews asin="B004WKRUI4"]

Technorati Tags: , , , , ,

Tuition Rising: Why College Costs So Much, With a new preface

41Dd0Lbln%2BL. SL160  Tuition Rising: Why College Costs So Much, With a new preface

America’s colleges and universities are the best in the world. They are also the most expensive. Tuition has risen faster than the rate of inflation for the past thirty years. There is no indication that this trend will abate. Ronald G. Ehrenberg explores the causes of this tuition inflation, drawing on his many years as a teacher and researcher of the economics of higher education and as a senior administrator at Cornell University. Using incidents and examples from his own experience, he discusses a wide range of topics including endowment policies, admissions and financial aid policies, the funding of research, tenure and the end of mandatory retirement, information technology, libraries and distance learning, student housing, and intercollegiate athletics. He shows that colleges and universities, having multiple, relatively independent constituencies, suffer from ineffective central control of their costs. And in a fascinating analysis of their response to the ratings publi

buynow big Tuition Rising: Why College Costs So Much, With a new preface

List Price: $ 25.00

Price: [wpramaprice asin="0674009886"]

[wpramareviews asin="0674009886"]

Tuition plans
–S.C. State University announced a 4 percent tuition increase for next year. –Citadel leaders are considering a 2.9 percent tuition increase. –The University of South Carolina, Clemson University and the College of Charleston have not made decisions on tuition for next year. …
Read more on The Post and Courier

Technorati Tags: , , , , ,

Doing Multicultural Education for Achievement and Equity

51gcR14nB7L. SL160  Doing Multicultural Education for Achievement and Equity

Doing Multicultural Education for Achievement and Equity, a hands-on, reader-friendly multicultural education textbook, actively engages education students in critical reflection and self-examination as they prepare to teach in increasingly diverse classrooms. In this engaging text, Carl A. Grant and Christine E. Sleeter, two of the most eminent scholars of multicultural teacher education, help pre-service teachers develop the tools they will need to learn about their students and their students’ communities and contexts, about themselves, and about the social relations in which schools are embedded. Doing Multicultural Education for Achievement and Equity challenges readers to take a truly active and ongoing role in promoting equity within education and helps to guide them in becoming highly qualified and fantastic teachers. Features and updates to this much-anticipated second edition include: Reflection boxes that encourage students to actively engage with the text and

buynow big Doing Multicultural Education for Achievement and Equity

List Price: $ 44.95

Price: [wpramaprice asin="0415880572"]

[wpramareviews asin="0415880572"]

Technorati Tags: , , , ,

 Page 3 of 3 « 1  2  3 

Bad Behavior has blocked 503 access attempts in the last 7 days.