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Tax Relief Notification

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Tax Debt Pro)
Mon Sep 23 11:04:31 2013

To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Mon, 23 Sep 2013 08:04:29 -0700
From: "Tax Debt Pro" <TaxDebtPro@memozaddche.us>

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Owe Back Taxes to the State or IRS? 

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 GENEVA  Russian, U.S., Egyptian and Arab League diplomats are pushing for 
a nuclear weapons-free Middle East, a goal they admit will be tough 
to reach.On the sidelines Thursday of nuclear talks in Geneva, the diplomats 
debated a plan proposed by Moscow think-tank PIR Center.It includes steps 
such as Mideast nations committing not to attack one other, allowing the 
U.N. nuclear agency to safeguard nuclear facilities, and creating a new 
regional body for nuclear cooperation.U.S. diplomat Thomas Countryman called 
the idea ambitious. But he and the Arab League's Wael Al-Assad cited 
Iran's disputed nuclear program   which Tehran insists is peaceful  
  as a major stumbling block.Russian diplomat Mikhail Ulyanov also said 
any accord depends on Israel, which is believed to have atomic weapons 
but hasn't confirmed that.
  would be better parents than gay men.Nancy 
Dreyer, a mother in a two-mom family, has noticed this in her 
own life."With gay male friends of ours who have kids, people will 
say, 'My gosh, who takes care of this baby?'    
as if they're not capable," says Dreyer, whose 57 and lives in 
suburban Boston.The assumption, she says, is that men aren't nurturing. 
And if they're too nurturing, she says, people get suspicious, noting that 
no one has ever questioned her and her partner about their ability 
to raise their son, who's now in college.She's noticed the different ways 
society treats gay men and lesbians, partly because she has a brother, 
Benjamin Dreyer, who's gay. The Dreyer siblings say it's difficult to compare 
their experiences because Benjamin came out in college, and Nancy in her 
early 30s.So he was the first to tell their parents. "They yelled 
at me. They took you to dinner," Benjamin Dreyer, who's 54 and 
works in publishing in New York City, now jokes with his sister.Truth 
was, as a young gay man coming of age as the AIDS 
epidemic took hold, his parents simply worried, and with good reason, his 
sister says.There's little doubt, they both say, that AIDS influenced the 
perception of gay men.Benjamin Dreyer says he dealt with societal bias by 
avoiding it, and surrounding himself with people he knew would be supportive, 
including his parents, eventually.But he's also realizing how quickly the 
need to do that is disappearing. He was s

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> t, with 71 percent of voters 
viewing him favorably. Hes followed by Carter and George H.W. Bush who 
each garner 59 percent favorable ratings.George W. Bushs highest positive 
rating came in the months following the September 11 terrorist attacks: 
84 percent of voters viewed him favorably in December 2001. He received 
his highest job approval rating -- 88 percent -- around that same 
time (November 2001). Bushs lowest job approval rating (25 percent) came 
in early October 2008, after the financial crisis had struck and the 
stock market suffered one of its worst weeks in decades.Overall, Bush had 
an average 51 percent approval rating across his entire presidency. Up to 
this point in his presidency, Obama has an average approval rating of 
48 percent.The Fox News poll is based on landline and cell phone 
interviews with 1,009 randomly chosen registered voters nationwide and was 
conducted under the joint direction of Anderson Robbins Research (D) and 
Shaw & Company Research (R) from April 20 to April 22. The 
full poll has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 
three percentage points.Fox News Poll: Bush's Favorable at 49%, Obama 52%
 he first time, he turned pale.When the 
time came, neither mom nor son hesitated.My first reaction was [to wonder] 
if that was my mom or not, and then I saw her 
eyes, Niko said. I thought, Thank God. Im going to finally get 
out of here. Im going to be free.These days, Niko is preparing 
to be home-schooled soon and begin his long reintegration process. He hopes 
to one day play football on his junior high school team and 
is grateful to be back in America. His mother is happy, too, 
though there is the constant fear that Mohamed Atteya will again appear 
in their lives, tracking down his son and trying once again to 
drag the boy back to Egypt and force him to live as 
a strict Muslim.My son told me [it was] to make him a 
Muslim, Atteya replied when asked why she thought her ex-husband snatched 
the boy. He said that we lack the morality and the values 
that their system has. And he said that Americans were so violent, 
he said we are a rotting society.- Kalliopi 'Kalli' AtteyaKalli Atteya's 
fears are stoked by the vivid memory of the downward spiral of 
their marriage that culminated in the cruel betrayal that almost cost her 
her son.It was in 1999 when Kalliopi "Kalli" Panagos fell hard for 
Mohamed Atteya. Within a year, they married and moved to nearby Chambersburg. 
But trouble began shortly after Nikos birth in July of 2000.Three months 
after our boy was born, he left, Kalli Atteya told FoxNews.com. He 
moved back to Harrisburg, and he dated
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