LOTTOMIKE's Blog

Man Gets 85,000 Dollar Cell Phone Bill

An oil field worker in western Canada was shocked this month to be charged 85,000 dollars for surfing the Internet on his new mobile phone, local media said Thursday.

Calgary resident Piotr Staniaszek, 22, had signed up for Bell Canada's cellular phone service at about 150 dollars per month, with unlimited mobile Web browsing.

He believed the plan allowed him to use the phone to connect with his computer, using it as a modem to download a lot of data, high-definition movies and other bandwidth-hungry applications.

But when his first bill arrived in the mail, Staniaszek realized to his horror that the company was charging him on a per-kilobyte basis for Internet downloads.

"I didn't know what to think. I thought there was probably a mistake," he told public broadcaster CBC. "I told them I wasn't aware that I would be charged for hooking up my phone to the computer."

A spokesman for Bell said the company will adjust Staniaszek's bill to 3,243 dollars, as "a measure of goodwill."

But Staniaszek said he still plans to try and fight it, "because I didn't know about the extra charges. Nobody explained any of this to me."

"The thing is, they've cut my phone off for being like 100 dollars over," he told CBC News. "Here, I'm 85,000 dollars over and nobody bothered to give me a call and tell me what was going on."

Entry #1,275

do you believe in......

i read a few blog entries about global warming,religion,the pope,believe in this god or that god,etc.  so the big question is do you believe there is a god?  do you believe or what are your thoughts or beliefs?

Entry #1,274

hurt

I hurt myself today
To see if I still feel
I focus on the pain
The only thing that's real
The needle tears a hole
The old familiar sting
Try to kill it all away
But I remember everything

[Chorus:]
What have I become
My sweetest friend
Everyone I know goes away
In the end
And you could have it all
My empire of dirt
I will let you down
I will make you hurt

I wear this crown of thorns
Upon my liar's chair
Full of broken thoughts
I cannot repair
Beneath the stains of time
The feelings disappear
You are someone else
I am still right here

[Chorus:]
What have I become
My sweetest friend
Everyone I know goes away
In the end
And you could have it all
My empire of dirt
I will let you down
I will make you hurt

If I could start again
A million miles away
I would keep myself
I would find a way

 

Entry #1,273

Obama catches Clinton

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Barack Obama has chipped away at Hillary Clinton's lead in New Hampshire locking the Democrats in a statistical tie a month before the first presidential primary, according to a CNN/WMUR Poll released Wednesday.

Clinton has dropped 5 percentage points since a previous CNN/WMUR survey in November, while Obama has gained 8 percentage points, according to the poll conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center. Clinton is now at 31 percent to Obama's 30 percent. New Hampshire's primary is set for January 8.

Clinton's 5-percentage point drop appears to have been largely due to the loss of support among women.

"Clinton's support among Democratic women in New Hampshire has dropped from 43 percent to 33 percent," said CNN Polling Director Keating Holland. "By contrast, her support among men dropped only 1 point to 27 percent in that same time period."

Clinton is still viewed by Democratic primary voters as having the most experience and the best chance of beating the Republican presidential nominee. But Obama is seen as more likable, more believable and more likely to unite the country.

Among Republicans, the poll reveals that despite Mike Huckabee's meteoric rise in some Iowa and national surveys, the former Arkansas governor has yet to catch fire in New Hampshire. Huckabee remains in single digits at 9 percent, up 4 percentage points from November. But he still trails ex-Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney by 23 percentage points.

Romney remains in the lead in New Hampshire with 32 percent, according to the poll, followed by former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Sen. John McCain of Arizona who are tied with 19 percent.

Despite Romney's double-digit edge over his nearest competitors, and the seemingly two-way Democratic battle between Clinton and Obama, Holland said Granite State victories are still up for grabs.

"This race is not over by a long shot," said Holland. "Forty-three percent of Democratic primary voters, and a whopping 55 percent of GOP voters, say they are still trying to make up their minds."

That's good news for former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards, who trails Democratic front-runners by 14 percentage points, and Giuliani and McCain, who both hope to derail Romney with a win in New Hampshire.

Still, the poll is welcome news for Romney, who has watched his numbers drop in Iowa as Huckabee has moved into first place in recent Hawkeye State polls.

This survey could indicate that for now, Romney has successfully erected a firewall in New Hampshire built largely by early organizing and public support from prominent Republicans in the state, such as Sen. Judd Gregg.

Amid a week of good poll news for Huckabee, this survey will be disappointing as it shows his brand of social conservatism does not appear to be catching on with the traditionally fiscal conservative New Hampshire Republicans. The Republicans surveyed in this poll ranked Huckabee fourth (10 percent) behind Romney (32 percent), McCain (21 percent) and Giuliani (13 percent) when asked which of the GOP presidential hopefuls represented their values.

The poll also had bad news for former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson, who garnered a tiny 1 percent among New Hampshire Republicans who responded to the poll.

A Thompson spokesman told CNN on Tuesday that a strategic decision had been made to focus all of the campaign's attention on Iowa until the January 3 caucuses.

The poll of 354 likely Republican primary voters, and 378 likely Democratic primary voters was conducted from December 6 through December 10. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 5 percentage points.

Entry #1,272

what are your plans for 2008?

mine are to have a better year,stay out of debt,exercise and stay healthy,spend time with my kiddos and have a better outlook on things.

Entry #1,271

ready to get 2007 over with

i'm ready to get 2007 over and bring in 2008.hopefully the new year will bring in better days.this year wasn't memorable by any means.every year this decade has been pretty good for me with the exception of the last half of 2006 and the whole year of 2007.changed jobs after years in one spot,going through financial crisis,my health ain't what it once was,family issues,etc.

Entry #1,270

how is your weather?

the highs here saturday and sunday is supposed to be 72 degrees.right now it is 31 degrees here in memphis.so what is the weather looking like in your neck of the woods? 

Entry #1,268

my city ranked fattest in america

1. Memphis, Tenn.: 34%

Researchers have found that residents are aware of the area's obesity problem, currently affecting 34% of its population. Among the causes they blame: high rates of poverty and a culture of Southern hospitality and food that values certain types of dishes--many of them fried--over healthier choices. Memphis actually sits on the western edge of a web of Southern cities along with Birmingham, Ala., and Atlanta, that also landed on our list.

 

Nashville came in #7.TWO CITIES IN THE TOP TEN FOR TENNESSEE.NOT GOOD.

Entry #1,267

25 days until christmas

25 days until christmas.so what are your plans this year.i have two toddlers aged three and two.one a boy and one is a girl.with my bills being out of control and gas prices going through the roof i initially was having trouble figuring out how i was going to get my kids christmas this year.last year H @ R block offered loans before christmas.not so this year and it scared me.laws were passed where they can't offer those anymore.so i was worried about how i was going to make it come together.thank goodness an online loan site agreed within minutes to wire me 300 dollars.i don't give a damn if i have to pay 60 dollars on the interest.these people did not rob me they just saved me.i know people say they prey on poor people but where do you go when a bank won't loan you a dime and friends and family suddenly act broke when they know i always pay bills on time and i've never had my phone or utilities cut off ever.plus i always pay my rent on time.if you don't have credit or good credit your screwed.i did not know that even if you pay all your bills on time that doesn't matter.they look mostly at credit cards,lol.how can you get one of those unless its secured if you don't have credit to begin with.well i'll worry with that later.i'm just glad i found something when i needed it.you have to do what you have to do sometimes.i'm just glad things came together.i know there are others here in a similar situation so its nothing to be ashamed of.thats why a lot of us are here in the first place looking for that extra dollar or two to make life easier.mine certainly hasn't been easy since the online gambling bill was passed.that took a few easy thousand out of my hands but i had to adapt to it.well i hope everyone here makes ends meet and that there is hope so don't give up......

Entry #1,266

Presidential Race Turns a Negative Page

MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP)- Mitt Romney is the target, abortion is the issue, and the $100,000 ad buy will change the tone of the Iowa and New Hampshire presidential primaries.

This weekend marks the first negative TV advertising in the two early-voting states as the campaign headed into the critical weeks before the first voting, with an independent group's claim that the former Massachusetts governor has flip-flopped - a sometimes crippling charge in presidential politics. Analysts say similar negative ads are likely against his chief GOP rival, Rudy Giuliani, whose positions on gun control and immigration are markedly different from those he espoused as New York mayor.

The anti-Romney ad campaign, by a Republican group that supports abortion rights, is fairly modest in scope. But it may open the door to bigger ad buys targeting other candidates and topics, several campaign veterans said.

"This will be the beginning of it," said Patrick Griffin, a Manchester-based advertising executive who handled President Bush's 2000 media effort in New Hampshire.

Given the pending ad against Romney and the confrontational tenor of Wednesday's Republican debate in Florida, Griffin said, the top campaigns must be ready to launch hard-hitting ads the instant they decide the benefits outweigh the risks. "You can be sure there are scripts written and, very likely, spots produced," he said.

And if not television, then radio. On Thursday, a Republican group that advocates for gay rights launched a 60-second anti-Romney radio ad criticizing his tax record.

Negative ads are certainly possible in the Democratic contest as well. But strategists say they are not surprised to see them first in the Republican race, where front-runners Romney and Giuliani have left a long evidentiary trail of their changed positions on key issues.

"It's a target-rich environment for negative ads," said Dante Scala, a political scientist at the University of New Hampshire.

Accusations of flip-flopping have animated campaigns for years. They proved especially damaging to Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry in 2004, and they have dogged Romney and Giuliani this year.

Thus far the accusations have arisen only in debates and news accounts, not in potentially powerful TV ads that often employ ominous music and grainy black-and-white or slow-motion images. And while campaign ads have saturated the Iowa and New Hampshire airwaves for weeks, they have been mostly upbeat, biographical spots.

That will change this weekend when the group Republican Majority for Choice starts its ads - in Iowa and New Hampshire newspapers and TV spots - calling Romney a flip-flopper on abortion.

The ads' potential impact is unclear. Romney repeatedly has acknowledged being an outspoken supporter of abortion rights until he changed his mind a few years ago.

"I don't know how many times I can tell it: I was wrong," he said in Wednesday's debate. Voters seeking candidates who are "not willing to admit they're ever wrong," he said, will "have to find somebody else."

The major threat to Romney would be TV ads suggesting his conversion was politically motivated to appeal to Republican primary voters. Among the rivals already raising the issue is Arizona Sen. John McCain, who has said Romney's biggest challenge "will be convincing Republicans he has principled positions on important issues."

Questions about gay rights also might provide grist for anti-Romney ads. When he unsuccessfully challenged Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., in 1994, Romney vowed to outdo the senator in championing the rights of gay men and lesbians in the workplace. "We must make equality for gays and lesbians a mainstream concern," Romney said at the time.

He never supported gay marriage, and he now highlights his support of "the traditional family" and a constitutional amendment to ban on same-sex marriages.

Some Republicans feel Giuliani is equally vulnerable to charges of flip-flopping if a televised feud begins.

As mayor, Giuliani sued gun makers and distributors, backed a federal assault-weapons ban and once described the National Rifle Association as extremist. He no longer holds those views, saying the terrorist attacks of 2001 changed his thinking about weapons and personal protection. He was quoted in 2002 and 2004, however, still staunchly supporting gun control.

Giuliani promises to crack down on illegal immigration, a message also at odds with his record as mayor. In 1996 he said there are times "when undocumented aliens must have a substantial degree of protection" to feel safe sending their children to school, reporting crimes and seeking medical treatment.

Such policy shifts by Giuliani and Romney are ready-made for negative ads, campaign strategists say, but the strategy carries risks. New Hampshire's all-important independent voters are especially leery of one-sided claims, and "there's a danger it can backfire," said Dean Spiliotes, who writes a nonpartisan political blog in New Hampshire.

Moreover, several analysts said, a serious Romney-Giuliani spat could catapult another candidate, such as McCain, to the top.

For all those reasons, it is possible that most or all of the early negative ads will be aired by independent groups, such as the one now targeting Romney on abortion. If the candidates decide to launch their own attack ads, "I think it's likely to happen in the last week or two," said Andy Smith, a pollster at the University of New Hampshire.

Meanwhile, candidates will anxiously monitor polls, campaign event crowds and other signs that their campaign is going up, down or nowhere. Ultimately, at least one candidate will decide negative ads are worth the risk, said Michael P. Dennehy, McCain's New Hampshire-based national political director.

"No candidate wants to be the first to go negative," Dennehy said in an interview. "But it will be done, mark my word. It's just a question of when."
 
By CHARLES BABINGTON,
AP


 
Entry #1,265

who will win the republican nomination?

who will win the republican nomination for president?

 

rudy,mitt,thompson,someone???

 

i see where mitt romney is coming on strong here.

 

could it be romney/guiliani

thompson/huckabee

 

c'mom people what do ya think?

Entry #1,263

Iran Says It's Produced New Missile

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Iran said Tuesday it has manufactured a new missile with a range of 1,200 miles capable of reaching Israel and U.S. bases in the Mideast, the official news agency IRNA reported.

Iran's Defense Minister Gen. Mostafa Mohammad Najjar said the Ashoura missile was produced by factories affiliated with the ministry, according to IRNA. He did not say whether Iran has test fired the missile or has plans to do so.

Many of Iran's weapons development claims have not been independently verified.

Iran launched an arms development program during its war with Iraq to compensate for a U.S. weapons embargo. Since 1992, Iran has reportedly produced its own jets, torpedoes, radar-avoiding missiles, tanks and armored personnel carriers.

Recent weapons development has been motivated by Iran's standoff with the U.S. over its controversial nuclear program, which Washington claims is a cover for weapons development - a charge Tehran denies.

Iran is known to possess a medium-range ballistic missile known as the Shahab-3, with a range of at least 800 miles. In 2005, Iranian officials said they had improved the range of the Shahab-3 to 1,200 miles, equal to the new missile announced Tuesday.

Najjar did not elaborate about the differences between the Ashoura missile and the Shahab-3 missile.

In September during a military parade, Iran introduced the Ghadr missile, which has a range of 1,119 miles.

Experts also believe Iran is developing the Shahab-4 missile, thought to have a range between 1,200 and 1,900 miles, that would enable it to hit much of Europe.


Entry #1,262

happy thanksgiving

                                          happy thanksgiving!!!

 

                                                            Turkey

Entry #1,261