[25851] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Reduce Tax Debt Now
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Tax Settle)
Tue Apr 15 13:10:33 2014
Date: Tue, 15 Apr 2014 10:10:31 -0700
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
From: "Tax Settle" <TaxSettle@catsntkalis.us>
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Resolve your Tax Debt today
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CARACAS, Venezuela One of Venezuela's most-prominent opposition bloggers,
whose English-language musings are a must-read for foreign journalists,
academics and political junkies, is leaving his beat as a chronicler of
the country's socialist revolution.Francisco Toro said that his decision
to cut ties with the Caracas Chronicles blog he co-founded reflects the
stagnation that has overtaken his homeland since former President Hugo Chavez's
death last year and which makes the country less interesting to write
about.When the blog began, in 2002, Chavez was a fast-rising, political
maestro who craftily leveraged the world's largest oil reserves to rally
anti-American sentiment in Latin America and other parts of the developing
world. A decade later, in the hands of his less charismatic successor
Nicolas Maduro, Toro says much of the revolution's influence has waned as
the economy reels from widespread shortages, 50 percent inflation and a
currency crisis."The truth is that like a lot of people I miss
Chavez," Toro, who was also a frequent contributor to the New York
Times, said in a telephone interview from his home in Montreal. "There's
no real hemispheric dimension anymore. Venezuela is so clearly not a model
that any sane person would want to emulate. It's just a local
story of a country gone crazy."The blog's other founder, Chile-based Juan
Cristobal Nagel, says the blog will soon be relaunched with new voices
including more women and
CARACAS, Venezuela One of Venezuela's most-prominent opposition bloggers,
whose English-language musings are a must-read for foreign journalists,
academics and political junkies, is leaving his beat as a chronicler of
the country's socialist revolution.Francisco Toro said that his decision
to cut ties with the Caracas Chronicles blog he co-founded reflects the
stagnation that has overtaken his homeland since former President Hugo Chavez's
death last year and which makes the country less interesting to write
about.When the blog began, in 2002, Chavez was a fast-rising, political
maestro who craftily leveraged the world's largest oil reserves to rally
anti-American sentiment in Latin America and other parts of the developing
world. A decade later, in the hands of his less charismatic successor
Nicolas Maduro, Toro says much of the revolution's influence has waned as
the economy reels from widespread shortages, 50 percent inflation and a
currency crisis."The truth is that like a lot of people I miss
Chavez," Toro, who was also a frequent contributor to the New York
Times, said in a telephone interview from his home in Montreal. "There's
no real hemispheric dimension anymore. Venezuela is so clearly not a model
that any sane person would want to emulate. It's just a local
story of a country gone crazy."The blog's other founder, Chile-based Juan
Cristobal Nagel, says the blog will soon be relaunched with new voices
including more women and
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<strong><center><a href="http://www.catsntkalis.us/l/lt1JO5136SXSGBR37IO/647KGRE249IUHN598QRN10VDG65731829VUU3590125519"><H3>Resolve your Tax Debt today</a></H3></strong>
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<span style="font-size: 10px; color: #666;"><a href="http://www.catsntkalis.us/l/lc7YC5136XRHRXR37SF/647MHWQ249HGOV598MYO10JSV65731829HID3590125519">Update Preferneces</a><br><br>
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<center>This email was intended for mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">HagertyHagertyHagertyHagertyHagertyCertain cars just wont recede into the
automotive fossil record. Designers (particularly those from their company
of origin) keep going back to the well. And why not? Its
almost impossible to top the cars on this list:HagertyThe gorgeous Toyota
2000 GT sports car was a giant commercial flop when it was
introduced. The status of Japanese cars in the U.S. market at the
time was roughly the equivalent of Korean cars about 15 years ago,
and a Japanese car that cost more than a Jaguar E-Type, a
Corvette or a Porsche 911 found few takers. Just over 300 were
built and the models failure continues to haunt Toyota. The roofline and
greenhouse of the 1967 2000GT show up almost unaltered in the latest
Toyota sports car concept, the FT-1. Incidentally, Toyota has probably had
the last laugh here as the 2000 GT is now the only
Japanese collectible car worth $1 million.HagertyThe 67 Eldorado is one
of the great overlooked post-war American classics. A Bill Mitchell design
triumph, its an ageless design that wouldnt look out of place in
a showroom today, particularly since Cadillac continues to revisit the 67
Eldo rear end, one of the greatest -views of all time.HagertyThe original
Jeep CJ may well be the most knocked-off vehicle of all time,
inspiring the likes of the Toyota FJ40 Land Cruiser, Nissan Patrol, Suzuki
Samurai, etc., not to mention, of course, the current Jeep Wrangler.HagertyThe
E-Type was one of the
hat
they were still seeking a man who fatally shot one 20-year-old Michigan
State University student and wounded another 20-year-old Friday night.Dominique
Nolff, of Middleville, was pronounced dead Saturday morning, about 12 hours
after he and his roommate were shot. The roommate, whose name wasn't
disclosed, was treated at a hospital and released.Police described the suspect
as a 20- to 25-year-old man who was wearing tan pants, a
black coat and black shoes or boots."Our thoughts and prayers are with
the Nolff family and friends," Michigan State spokesman Kent Cassella said
in a statement. He said the university would assist East Lansing police
as needed.
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