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Back Taxes weighing you down?

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Urgent Tax)
Fri Sep 13 13:05:35 2013

Date: Fri, 13 Sep 2013 10:05:33 -0700
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Urgent Tax" <UrgentTax@pipsixnilgau.com>

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Back Taxes weighing you down?


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 ribes 
a rail line speeding nearly 100,000 people a day along a route 
connecting Venezuela's main port, Puerto Cabello, with Valencia and the 
country's other major central city, Maracay.She says it will be ready in 
2012.Yet not a single section is complete after a decade of construction.The 
railway may be the most visible symbol of unfulfilled promises in Chavez's 
14 years as president. It is the heart of his ambitious plan 
to create a network of lines across Venezuela, a nation that now 
has a sum total of 40 kilometers (25 miles) of operating tracks.In 
Maracay, three-story concrete pylons linked by monstrous girders parallel 
Venezuela's main central highway. The elevated rail bed halts abruptly at 
road crossings. There are phantom stations."This is going really slow," 
construction worker Anselmo Mendoza, 46, said while walking atop one section, 
its steel bolts, plates and rebar coated with rust. "There isn't any 
type of coordination."Mendoza has been on the job nine years. Most days, 
he and his co-workers try to keep busy with work often unrelated 
to actual construction.Billions have been spent so far on the 128-kilometer 
(80-mile) project.Transportation Ministry spokesman Alexis Cabrera was asked 
for information on construction delays and budgets. He said he would need 
to ask the minister for permission, but didn't call back.At campaign rallies, 
Capriles always rattles off a list of Chavez's unfinished projects.On Wednesday 
night in 
 l on Sunday.Land invasions are nothing new 
in Venezuela. What's different now is that people are invading valuable 
properties in city centers.All the squatting riles Rosa Contrera, a 57-year-old 
housewife who walked past the invaders, shaking her head. The day before, 
people from the apartment block adjacent to hers attacked the invaders with 
Molotov cocktails."This is what Chavismo has created: people who expect 
handouts," said Contrera, a Capriles supporter. "A country doesn't advance 
with that mentality."The government says Venezuela's poverty rate dropped 
from more than 50 percent to 21 percent under Chavez's leadership, though 
there is still plenty of misery.Lake Valencia has been rising few feet 
a year and swallowed up Antonio Rojas' home last year."We filled out 
all the forms but in the end we didn't get a house," 
said the wiry 67-year-old, who works at a nursery earning the equivalent 
of $17 a day at the official exchange rate and $5 on 
the black market.At a squatter's settlement outside Tacarigua, a town on 
Valencia's southern outskirts built around a sugar cane mill, Rojas and 
his wife share a dirt-floor, aluminum shack with their 7-year-old son, Gregorio. 
The boy doesn't go to school because there are none nearby.They have 
neither water nor sewage service. Dirty dishes are piled on a kitchen 
table. Burned garbage litters the yard.When a reporter visited, the family 
hadn't had power for a week. They siphon it off a nearby 
tr

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> e, Maine.  Proulx said he once chased Christopher 
Knight.  Knight, known as the North Pond Hermit, was arrested Thursday, 
April 4, 2013, while stealing food from another camp in Rome. Authorities 
said he may be responsible for more than 1,000 burglaries. (AP Photo/Robert 
F. Bukaty))The Associated PressROME, Maine  Cottage owners on a central 
Maine lake are expressing relief that a so-called hermit is no longer 
at large.Law enforcement officials say 47-year-old Christopher Knight lived 
in the woods for 27 years and may be responsible for more 
than 1,000 burglaries of food and other items. Authorities arrested Knight 
last week after he tripped a surveillance sensor while allegedly stealing 
food from a camp for special needs people.Authorities are sorting through 
Knight's lair in the woods, but the land's owner is turning away 
others who have hiked there to get a look.Among them was Frank 
Ten Broeck, a retired New Jersey police official who has a cottage 
nearby. Ten Broeck says it's "mind-boggling" that Knight could survive through 
Maine's severe winters for so long.
 RIO DE JANEIRO  Public transit vans like the one in which 
an American student was gang raped last month were banned Thursday from 
Rio de Janeiro's touristy South Zone neighborhoods.The measure was floated 
late last year as a way to help ease the city's chronic 
traffic jams but gained urgency as a safety measure in the wake 
of the March 30 attack on the American woman and her French 
companion, who were attacked by a van driver and two other young 
men who brutalized them for about six hours inside the vehicle.Under a 
decree published Thursday in the local government's Official Journal, the 
vans will be prohibited from operating in high-rent neighborhoods including 
Ipanema and Leblon beaches, as well as Copacabana, where the two foreigners 
boarded the van to travel to a nightlife hotspot in downtown. Exceptions 
will be made for vans serving two "favela" hillside slums sandwiched between 
high-rent South Zone neighborhoods, according to the decree, which takes 
effect on Monday.Without the vans and with a key metro station closed 
pending the extension of the subway, residents and workers in the South 
Zone will need to rely on buses, taxis and private vehicles to 
get around.The 12-seat vans are seen as a quicker alternative to buses 
and largely travel the same routes. They will continue to ply the 
poor, sprawling suburbs that ring this city of 6 million.Thursday's decree 
was the second safety regulation for public vans put in place since 
the
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