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Reduce Tax Debt Now

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Tax Debt Pro)
Fri Jan 10 13:12:31 2014

From: "Tax Debt Pro" <TaxDebtPro@adseepyku.us>
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
Date: Fri, 10 Jan 2014 10:12:30 -0800

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Back Taxes weighing you down?


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 ercent surveillance of the entire border, and apprehending 
90 percent of border crossers or would-be crossers -- or getting them 
to turn back to Mexico -- in sectors where the majority of 
unauthorized entries take place.As of the end of the 2010 fiscal year, 
the Department of Homeland Security reported achieving some level of operational 
control of 44 percent of the nearly 2,000-mile border, according to a 
Government Accountability Office report this year. Operational control was 
defined as the ability to detect and respond to cross-border illegal activity.In 
one border sector cited by GAO, the busy Tucson sector, 64 percent 
of people who managed to make it across the border were apprehended 
in 2011, while 23 percent turned back to Mexico and 13 percent 
got away. That meant the sector stopped or turned back 87 percent 
of crossers, close to the 90 percent level sought by the legislation.The 
new goals would be achieved by giving the Department of Homeland Security 
six months from the bill's enactment to create a new border security 
plan deploying the personnel, infrastructure and technology needed to achieve 
the 90 percent effectiveness rate. Also within six months, the department 
would have to create a plan to identify where new fencing is 
needed on the border. Once those plans are certified, people living here 
illegally could begin to apply for a provisional status allowing them to 
work here legally.If the 90 percent rate of apprehensio
 new momentum after the 
banking crisis in Cyprus pushed depositors there to find creative ways to 
move money. Fink, the Argentine, favors bitcoins because he believes they 
will insulate him from his country's high inflation. Others -- from Iranian 
musicians to American auto dealers -- use the currency to dodge international 
sanctions or reach new markets.But the anything-goes nature of Bitcoin has 
also made it attractive to denizens of the Internet's dark side.One of 
the most prominent destinations for bitcoins remains Silk Road, a black 
market website where drug dealers advertise their wares in a consumer-friendly 
atmosphere redolent of Amazon or eBay -- complete with a shopping cart 
icon, a five-point rating system and voluminous user reviews. The site uses 
Tor, an online anonymity network, to mask the location of its servers, 
while bitcoin payments ensure there's no paper trail.One British user told 
the AP he first got interested in Silk Road while he was 
working in China, where he used the site to order banned books. 
After moving to Japan, he turned to the site for an occasional 
high."Buying recreational drugs in Japan is difficult, especially if you 
don't know people from growing up there," said the user, who asked 
for anonymity because he did not want his connection to Silk Road 
to be publicly known.He warned that one of the site's drawbacks is 
that the drugs can take weeks to arrive "so there's no spontaneity."Drug 
dealers aren'

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> ort the 
efforts to clarify current laws to prevent any delays in disclosing this 
information in cases of missing children, which includes persons under age 
21 under federal law."Debra Lewis, a spokeswoman for Verizon, said the phone 
carrier supports the Smiths in their effort to pass the bill, but 
declined to comment further on the legislation.Groups like the American 
Civil Liberties Union say proposals such as Kelseys Law raise some privacy 
concerns.The major one is that it removes a check on when law 
enforcement can access this type of information, Chris Calabrese, legislative 
counsel for the ACLU, told FoxNews.com.An emergency cant be a magic word 
 where all police have to do is say emergency and cellphone 
companies release information, he said.While Calabrese acknowledged that 
the vast majority of calls by local police are legitimate emergencies, many 
have also been proven not to be.People want companies to safeguard their 
information and this removes their discretion to do that, he said.
 aid. If one goes offline, 
others fail. Employees don't even have fuses, said Lara. "They have to 
cobble together their own to keep things running.""There's no money to buy 
parts for something that breaks," said Giovanni Rinaldi, a 15-year employee 
at a hydroelectric plant in the eastern city of Ciudad Guayana, which 
he said is plagued by four or five power outages a week 
despite being in the region that generates more than 70 percent of 
Venezuela's electricity.He was fired this week after posting photos on Twitter 
of a state utility company vehicle plastered with Maduro campaign material."We 
had put our own money into keeping those vehicles running because the 
company didn't," Rinaldi, a 40-year-old father of two, said by phone. "It's 
not right."The government hasn't adequately spent to expand and strengthen 
the power grid, critics say.They also blame problems on Cuban, Iranian and 
Uruguayan technicians brought in to run by Chavez to run the system. 
Accidents are up tenfold, and there are places in remote states that 
suffer outages for as long as three to five days, says Lara.Maduro, 
who was sworn in as interim president the day of Chavez's funeral, 
promises better performance but blames the recent surge in outages on sabotage 
by sympathizers of his challenger Sunday, opposition leader Henrique Capriles.The 
government has "militarized" the electric grid and said Tuesday that at 
least 17 alleged saboteurs have been detained but offered n
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