LOTTOMIKE's Blog

my pick 3 predictions

                         

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(Locked)
Entry #1,155

cicadas...a deafening love story

CBS) Cicadas are back — by the billions — for the first time since 1990. But Laura Peters, who lives at the epicenter of the invasion, says bring 'em on. "They don't do any damage," she says. "They don't eat your children. They just come and make a lot of noise."

Four-time cicada invasion veteran Ed Ewald, 72, compares the unique sound to "an alien invasion," reports CBS News correspondent Michelle Miller.

They've clearly already captured the Windy City. From field trips at nature centers to creepy-crawly street fairs, cicada-mania is playing at full volume in Chicago.

The volume is the drone of male cicadas attempting to lure their mates. The sound can get up near 100 decibels — as loud as a bus.

The sounds of the cicadas are the unwelcome competition that forced the area's biggest outdoor music hall to reschedule an entire month of concerts.

"Once they start with that mating call, which is almost as loud as the top volume we use for a rock concert," says Welz Kaufmann, president of Chicago's Ravinia Festival, "there's not much we can do."

Mike Raupp, a University of Maryland Entomology professor, is an expert on all things cicada. To him, it's a love story, 17 years in the making. He describes the bugs' single mission in life: to dig themselves out of a hole, shed their skin, climb a tree and let nature take its course.

"They're singing their little hearts out," says Raupp. "They've only got a couple of weeks to hook this thing up."

It isn’t easy being a cicada. After waiting all those years, only a handful live long enough to mate. The challenge: not getting eaten along the way. It seems that anything bigger than a cicada wants to make a meal of one.

Even one of the bugs' biggest fans can't resist.

"They're delicious," says Raupp.

Cicadas' time on Earth is short: A few weeks of heaven, and they're history — bound to a cycle that will bury them again until 2024.

Entry #1,153

Putin Blames U.S. for New Arms Race

MOSCOW (June 1) - President Vladimir Putin  said Thursday that Russia's test-firing of new missiles this week was a response to U.S. plans to build missile defense sites across Europe, and suggested Washington is pursuing an imperialist policy that has triggered a new arms race.

In a clear reference to the United States, Putin harshly criticized "diktat and imperialism" in global affairs and warned that Russia will keep strengthening its military potential to maintain a global strategic balance.

"It wasn't us who initiated a new round of arms race," Putin said when asked about Russia's missile tests this week at a news conference in Moscow.

In Washington, White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe indicated that Moscow's tests only underscore the U.S. contention that the missile defense system would not be a threat to Russia.

"Russia's strong missile capabilities are no match for our European missile defense plans and will not upset the strategic balance in the region," Johndroe said.

Putin described the tests of a new ballistic missile capable of carrying multiple nuclear warheads and a new cruise missile as part of the Russian response to the planned deployment of new U.S. military bases and missile defense sites in ex-Soviet satellites in eastern Europe.

He assailed the United States and other NATO  members for failing to ratify an amended version of the 1990 Conventional Forces in Europe treaty, which limits the deployment of heavy non-nuclear weapons around the continent.

"We have signed and ratified the CFE and are fully implementing it. We have pulled out all our heavy weapons from the European part of Russia to (locations) behind the Ural Mountains and cut our military by 300,000 men," Putin said.

"And what about our partners? They are filling eastern Europe with new weapons. A new base in Bulgaria, another one in Romania, a (missile defense) site in Poland and a radar in the Czech Republic," he said. "What we are supposed to do? We can't just sit back and look at that."

Putin and other Russian officials have repeatedly rejected U.S. assurances that the planned missile defense installations are meant to counter a potential threat from nations such as Iran  and pose no danger to Russia.

He reaffirmed his warning that Russia would opt out of the CFE treaty altogether if NATO nations fail to ratify its amended version.

"Either you ratify the treaty and start observing it, or we will opt out of it," Putin said.

In remarks directed at Washington, Putin blasted those "who want to dictate their will to all others regardless of international norms and law."

"It's dangerous and harmful," he added. "Norms of the international law were replaced with political expediency. We view it as diktat and imperialism."

In one of the tests Tuesday, a prototype of Russia's new intercontinental ballistic missile, called the RS-24, was fired from a mobile launcher at the Plesetsk launch site in northwestern Russia and its test warhead landed on target 3,400 miles away on the Kamchatka Peninsula in the far eastern part of the country, officials said.

Deploying a new missile capable of carrying multiple nuclear warheads could allow Russia to maintain nuclear parity with the United States despite having to gradually decommission Soviet-built ICBMs.

The military also tested a new cruise missile based on the existing short-range Iskander missile.

First Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov, widely seen as a potential Kremlin  candidate to succeed Putin, hailed the missile's capability on Thursday.

"It can be used at long range with surgical precision, as doctors say" Ivanov said, according to the ITAR-Tass news agency. "Russia needs this weapon to maintain strategic stability."

ITAR-Tass said Thursday the new cruise missile, R-500, will have a range of up to 310 miles, the limit under a Soviet-era treaty that banned intermediate-range missiles. Putin and other officials have called the treaty outdated but have not said Russia would opt out of it.
By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV
AP

Entry #1,152

vitamins---are they good?

i was wondering if vitamins are good.is just a centrum multivitamin good or extra b or c vitamins ok to take?  just curious what suggestions others have.you?

Entry #1,151

What Will Happen When UIGE Act Goes into Effect

What Will Happen When UIGE Act Goes into Effect

Predictions about the UIGEA Rules and Regulations
Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act

 

After many years of failed efforts, the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA) was finally snuck through Congress in late 2006. As we all now know, the bill does not make online poker illegal nor does the bill change gaming law. What it does is to make it more make it more difficult to get money into a site by forbidding U.S. financial Institutions from funding the type of online gambling that the law has previously made illegal.

 

270 Days

 

The UIGEA requires the Secretary and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, in consultation with the Attorney General, to prescribe regulations to identify and block transactions to online gaming sites within 270 days of October 13, 2006, when President Bush signed the bill into law.

 

When time limits are involved, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure, Rule 6 usually requires us not to count the very day from which the designated period of time begins to run nor the weekend if the time limit ends on a weekend. My calculations makes July 10 the compliance date.

 

The Process

 

The process of making rules and regulations so that banks know which transactions to reject falls naturally upon two entities, the Federal Reserve and the Attorney General’s office.

 

The Federal Reserve is the central bank of the United States, founded by Congress in 1913, for the purpose of providing our nation with a safe, flexible, and stable financial system. Its unique structure includes a federal government agency, the Board of Governors, and 12 regional Reserve Banks. The Federal Reserve is the logical starting place for creating bank regulations because that is one of its ordinary tasks.

 

However, it is the job of the Attorney General’s office to prosecute crimes. To do that, this arm of the government investigates and is held to have knowledge regarding possible criminal activity. The AG’s office investigates such things as online gaming. Together the two entities have been charged with creating procedures to prohibit the funding of online gaming sites.

 

The Attorney General’s Office

 

The Attorney General is appointed by the President of the United States and confirmed by the United States Senate. Alberto R. Gonzales was sworn in as the nation's 80th Attorney General on February 3, 2005. Prior to serving at the Department of Justice, he was counsel to President George W. Bush in January of 2001. In other words, Gonzales and the president are buddies. It is not unusual that the president appoints his most loyal associates to serve in his cabinet.

 

Under the tutelage of Gonzales, eight U.S. Attorneys were suspiciously fired in 2006. Although U.S. Attorneys serve at the will of the president, they cannot be fired for illegal reasons. A congressional investigation into the matter is focusing on whether the Department of Justice and the White House were using the U.S. Attorney positions for political gain. It appears that some of the attorneys were targeted for dismissal to impede investigations of Republican politicians and that some were targeted for their failure to initiate investigations that would damage Democratic politicians or hamper Democratic-leaning voters. The congressional hearings have uncovered a myriad of ugly events demonstrating that Gonzales has not been as forthcoming as he would have Congress believe.

 

Senate Democrats have announced that they will be introducing a no-confidence resolution in June when Congress reconvenes. The one-sentence resolution says, "It is the sense of the Senate that Attorney General Alberto Gonzales no longer holds the confidence of the Senate and the American people."

 

The AG’s Input

 

What has Gonzales been doing ito fashion the proper rules and regulations required by the UIGEA? What we know for sure is that Gonzales is busy trying to save his job. What we also can deduce is that Gonzales doesn’t think we can come up with adequate controls. We know that because of what Gonzales said during the recent congressional hearing when he was questioned by Senator Jon Kyl (R-AZ), who used the hearing for his own political agenda. Although the issue at the hearing centered around the improprieties of Gonzales’s office, Kyl took the opportunity to cross-examine Gonzales about the UIGEA rules and regulations.

 

The Kyl/Gonzales Exchange

 

At the recent Senate hearing, Kyl questioned Gonzales about the anticipated UIGEA rules. Kyl was trying to get Gonzales to agree on a procedure that would stop online funding; but Gonzales basically said that the AG’s office prosecutes people after they commit crimes. Here’s an exerpt:

 

GONZALES: Senator, I think -- there's some operational issues for us, quite frankly, with respect to whether or not we can develop such a -- what we're saying is, these guys are breaking the law. And quite frankly, there's no amount -- what we do is we prosecute that. And so I know my staff has been consulting with your staff, trying to work through this.

 

Because I'm as anxious as you are to try to get these regulations working so we can do a better job of enforcing the law against these...

 

KYL: But providing that information, specifically, to the financial institutions would offer them certainty as to their legal obligations, and would assist them in ensuring that the law would be effectively enforced, would it not?

 

GONZALES: It would certainly provide more certainty. And I'm not saying it can't be done. We're trying to work through this, Senator And I understand -- I certainly understand your interest in this. And my staff is working as hard as we can to see if we can find a way to do this.

 

KYL: Well, what I'm interested in, though, since Treasury doesn't have access to the same information DOJ does, and the list of these improper sites needs to come from DOJ rather than Treasury, and the regulations are to be provided by Treasury, in consultation with the Department of Justice, whether you will agree with us that the Department of Justice should do everything it can to gather this information together and provide it to the Department of Justice -- excuse me -- Department of Treasury, not just once, but on some appropriate ongoing basis.

 

GONZALES: Sir, what I can commit to you is that we're going to do everything we can to make sure these regulations are strong and we get them implemented as quickly as we can. That's what I can commit to you, sir. I know this is an important issue to you. It's an important issue to me. But we need to do it the right way. And I think we can -- I'm not saying we can't do this list. We're still looking at this very, very hard.

 

Still Looking

 

Although the AG’s office has little more than a month to come up with regulations, they are “still looking” at the issue. This means they are not close to fashioning competent regulations with any teeth. 

 

It is quite possible that the AG’s office is still reviewing the issue because they have taken to heart the comments of representatives of financial institutions when the UIGEA was passed.

 

“The bill sets up banks to police a social issue,” said Laura Fisher, spokeswoman for the American Bankers Association. “It's not something we want to encourage.”

 

The bill passed by Congress could allow regulators to exempt checks and money transfers because they are more difficult to track.

 

“Analyzing 40 billion checks a year would be a largely manual process,” Fisher said. “If checks are not exempt, this would break our banks as it would be too costly to enforce.”

 

If checks are exempt, players could simply send a check to an online site.

 

AG Gonzales must know that banks cannot police checks. And that is just one avenue. What about Western Union? What about cashier’s checks? Those are the methods I have seen as of late. If those simple methods cannot be regulated, just what is being regulated? Many players don’t try to use credit cards any more. When players want to deposit their hard-earned money into an offshore site to have a little evening fun, there are a myriad of methods that U.S. regulations cannot touch.

 

What are Citizens to DO?

 

The bottom line is that when our government tries to prohibit citizens from spending our money, we will react badly and find a legitimate way to spend our hard-earned money as we choose. We can open a bank account in Canada, wire money, or send a cashier’s check. We can go to our favorite online site and review all the legal ways to transfer money. Whatever regulations Gonzales and his cronies construct, creative players will find legitimate ways around those regulations.

 

My prediction is that our government will not be able to create rules and regulations with any teeth whatsoever. 

by--allyn jaffery shulman

Entry #1,150

stabbing pain in left side

i woke up out of my sleep with a stabbing pain in my left side in the rib cage area.this was one of the worst pains i ever had.it went on for about a minute or two and went away.had it not gone away i would've had to go get seen about.anyone here ever had something like this?

Entry #1,148

have a good memorial day

US Flaghave a good memorial day.also for my best friend who got called up for a second tour of iraq and just left last week so he is probably just arriving there.

Entry #1,147

more credit card advice needed

Fees and Disclosures

  • Annual Percentage Rate 19.5% APR
  • Balance Computation Method Average Daily Balance (including new purchases)
  • Annual Fee $59 / yr.

  • Minimum Finance Charge $0.50

 

 

do i owe 59 bucks a year if i get this card?  what is that 19.5 apr?      what is the 50 cent finance charge?      if i buy something on a credit card do you have to pay it all back each month?

 

Entry #1,145

secured credit card ---advice needed

i have never had a credit card ever.i filed bankruptcy a few years back.everytime i apply i get turned down.well a new deal has come along where i'll be able to get a secured credit card.i have to put up a few hundred in a savings account as collateral and then i'll get a card.ok here is the question.on average how much does a person usually pay each month for fees.lets say i don't buy anything in june do i still owe a fee for that month.give me a few pointers.lets say i go buy a 39.99 fan to put in my room for air but thats all i buy then what am i looking at as far as that goes?  curious,so i hope others can give me some ballpark figures and advice,thanks!!

Entry #1,142