Sunday, March 31, 2013

Bitter Pill: The rise and fall of Manitoba's Internet pharmacy pioneers ...

Kris Thorkelson is now being investigated in connection with counterfeit drugs.

Enlarge Image

Kris Thorkelson is now being investigated in connection with counterfeit drugs.

MediPlan Pharmacy quickly went from one employee to 60 in early 2002. It would continue to grow to 230 employees, including 16 pharmacists -- a huge economic boon to the small town of Minnedosa.

Enlarge Image

MediPlan Pharmacy quickly went from one employee to 60 in early 2002. It would continue to grow to 230 employees, including 16 pharmacists -- a huge economic boon to the small town of Minnedosa. (FRED GREENSLADE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS ARCHIVES)

Daren Jorgenson got out of the business just in time.

Enlarge Image

Daren Jorgenson got out of the business just in time.

Internet pharmacy pioneers Chantelle and Mark Rzepka (left) and Andrew and Catherine Strempler in 2002. Thirteen years later, Andrew Strempler is in the midst of a four-year sentence in a U.S. prison for conspiracy to commit mail fraud.

Enlarge Image

Internet pharmacy pioneers Chantelle and Mark Rzepka (left) and Andrew and Catherine Strempler in 2002. Thirteen years later, Andrew Strempler is in the midst of a four-year sentence in a U.S. prison for conspiracy to commit mail fraud. (FRED GREENSLADE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS ARCHIVES)

The story is like folklore now.

A kid recently graduated from the University of Manitoba with a pharmacy degree in his back pocket had set out on a dream to own a small-town pharmacy. He did the market research, got a loan from his dad, and he and his new bride opened a shop in Minnedosa, on the Yellowhead Highway, 203 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg. Andrew Strempler was just 25 at the time, the youngest pharmacy owner in Manitoba.

Only he forgot one thing. While his market research showed Minnedosa could support a second establishment, he didn't take into account that allegiances for the existing pharmacy ran deep -- generations deep. No one was switching from the one their family had patronized since almost settlement days for some upstart from Winnipeg.

So Strempler sat in the window of his empty store, passing the time by surfing the Internet, straightening and re-straightening the cold medicines and antiperspirants on his shelves, and watching passersby pass by to the other pharmacy two blocks down. The monotony was only broken by the daily phone calls from wholesalers demanding payment.

Then, out of the crushing ennui, a light bulb. After all, a box of 105 pieces of Nicorette gum in Canada at the time cost $20 (US), versus $55 across the border. So he listed a pack on eBay just to see what would happen. It sold in seconds, not minutes. So he did it again. And again. Soon, he was showing up at Costco in Winnipeg and literally buying their entire stock.

With the arrival of the new millennium as the backdrop, the Internet pharmacy was born.

Initially, he set up a website just for Nicorette gum for cigarette addicts. But why stop there? Strempler's MediPlan Pharmacy soon began advertising limited brands of prescription drugs under domain name RxNorth.com.

Business soared. The markup pharmaceutical companies charged in the U.S. was astronomical versus Canada. It helped that the Canadian loonie dipped into the 62-cent range versus the American greenback. But in the early years, Canadian Internet pharmacies were selling prescription drugs to American patients at an average of 20 per cent of U.S. retail prices. (Even though the Canadian dollar hovers around par today, Internet pharmacies are still able to sell drugs on average for about half the retail price in the U.S. For example, Viagra sells for $25 a pill in the U.S., versus $11to $12 that licensed Internet pharmacies charge.)

Strempler quickly realized he couldn't handle all the business himself and reached out to former pharmacy classmate, Mark Rzepka. Rzepka, who was even younger than Strempler, grew up in East Kildonan and had been the school president at Miles Macdonell Collegiate. In the University of Manitoba's faculty of pharmacy, Strempler struggled until Rzepka became his "study buddy" and helped get him through. Strempler now approached Rzepka with an offer: for $100,000, he could become a partner in Strempler's MediPlan Pharmacy.

Rzepka was working in a tiny, hole-in-the-wall pharmacy in a Balmoral Street strip mall near the University of Winnipeg. The owner of the pharmacy was none other than Kris Thorkelson, who would go on to become the biggest Internet pharmacist in Canada. Thorkelson knew nothing about Internet pharmacy back then. Thorkelson's friend and former partner was Daren Jorgenson, another pioneer who would set up the first Internet pharmacies in Tel Aviv and London. Jorgenson had started to dabble in selling prescription drugs online. When he heard about the Strempler offer, he told Rzepka it could be a good investment.

That was the genesis. Those three Internet pharmacy kings, Strempler, Jorgenson, and Thorkelson, would go on to rock the pharmaceutical world and become a catalyst to health-care reform in the U.S. They would make life-saving medications more affordable for countless Americans who didn't have private health-care plans. They turned Manitoba into the industry's epicentre, creating thousands of jobs and tens of millions of dollars in economic spinoffs. They also became fabulously rich.

Today, Strempler is in a Miami jail serving a four-year prison sentence, Jorgenson got out the industry just in time, and Thorkelson is being investigated in connection with counterfeit drugs in the U.S. Some in the industry think it could be his downfall.

How did it go so wrong?

You have to start with MediPlan, largely recognized as the first Internet pharmacy of any size. There is some argument that a guy in New Zealand was the first, and that the first Internet pharmacy in Canada was run by Harvey Organ of Hamilton, Ont. However, Organ sold to doctor's offices, not directly to patients like Strempler.

Besides, prestigious newspapers such as Wall Street Journal and New York Times weren't knocking on Harvey Organ's door for an exclusive interview in 2001. The American press was interested in the twentysomethings running MediPlan in Minnedosa.

MediPlan had run very bold, very expensive full-page ads in U.S. dailies, including the New York Times, listing its website and their cheaper drug prices. Strempler initially turned down those interview requests. As the MediPlan foursome explained later -- Strempler and wife, Catherine; Rzepka, and his then-wife, Chantelle -- they didn't feel ready to tell the world what they were doing just yet.

By the start of 2002, MediPlan already had 75 employees, including 32 telephone operators taking drug orders from Americans, and it was hiring new people by the day.

Shiploads of money started to pour in and that always gets a lot of focus. But what every large Internet pharmacist also remembers are the desperate Americans they talked to in those early days. People from the U.S., where almost 45 million people have no health insurance, would break down and cry over the telephone because they couldn't afford life-saving drugs.

"A lot of seniors say to us, 'Do I eat, or do I buy my cancer medication?'" Catherine Strempler said in an interview in 2002.

Seniors, with their higher drug needs, have always made up the majority of the market for Internet pharmacies. But there was another key category. "The women with breast cancer were huge" in their emotional desperation to access Canadian prescription drugs, said Jorgenson, whose main Internet pharmacy was canadameds.com at Main Street and Euclid Avenue. A month's supply of Tomoxifen, a drug for breast cancer treatment, cost $30 in Canada versus $300 to $350 stateside. Another category of desperate buyers were young men with HIV. They required an expensive cocktail of drugs to slow the virus.

The weaker Canadian dollar influenced drug prices but so did Canadian drug pricing controls co-ordinated by the federal agency, Patented Medicine Prices Review Board. It bases Canadian prices on an average of drug prices in G7 countries.

At one point, U.S. President George W. Bush threatened the Canadian government. The big pharmaceutical companies were on Bush's case. He told Ottawa to legislate an end to the Internet pharmacies or risk losing U.S. trade in beef and lumber. He tossed the problem Ottawa's way because Bush knew there was no chance he could legislate against Internet pharmacies at home. Try telling American seniors they couldn't buy Lipitor from Canada anymore. (The price for the cholesterol-fighting drug from MediPlan was US$183 for 90 pills, versus US$269 in the U.S.) The American Association of Retired Persons (AARP), boasting 40 million members, and state-level groups such as the Minnesota State Senior Citizens Association (it used to run busloads of seniors into Manitoba to buy medicines from pharmacist Ken Kronson's Medi-Mart Pharmacy on Pembina Highway in pre-Internet days) were a powerful political card.

Neither could Bush control state governors who had begun recommending Manitoba's Internet pharmacies. Government staff from states including Illinois, California, Vermont, New Hampshire, Minnesota, North Dakota, and Wisconsin, all traveled to Winnipeg to visit the pharmacies and ensure there was nothing nefarious about the operations.

In total, 10 states sanctioned the buying of prescription drugs from Canada, and those states bought from the top five or six sellers, all of them based in Manitoba. Governors in Illinois, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Missouri and Kansas even established Internet purchasing sites for their residents. Some states encouraged public employees to buy medications from Canada to save money for themselves and the employee health-care plan. In Springfield, Mass., the civic government ordered prescription drugs directly from Canada for its employee health plan.

The Internet pharmacy industry had to be squeaky clean or lose reputation. So it didn't sell narcotic drugs or any drug considered to be abusable. The policy was to only fill prescriptions for chronic maintenance medications in 90 day supplies. So they sold drugs for long-term health issues such as cancer, diabetes, cholesterol, hypertension, and high blood pressure.

Physician signatures were always required on a U.S. prescription, which was then converted into a Canadian prescription by having a Canadian doctor review the medical history and "co-sign." The prescription could then be legally filled in Canada.

Nonetheless, Canadian regulatory agencies, from the Manitoba Pharmaceutical Association, to the Manitoba College of Physicians and Surgeons, to the Canadian Medical Association, began threatening Internet pharmacists and any doctors assisting them. Regulatory bodies argued it was unethical for the co-signing doctor not to have actually examined the U.S. patient, claiming the practice put patients at risk. Under pressure from Bush, Ottawa tried drafting legislation to stop the co-signing practice.

But their argument had more leaks than an email spam filter. Internet pharmacists argued that a co-signing Canadian doctor provided a second set of eyes to confirm prescriptions and to catch dangerous drug interactions, and therefore added a level of safety. And while it was true Canada doesn't recognize reciprocity for U.S. prescriptions, most states in the U.S. accept a prescription from a Canadian doctor with no co-signing whatsoever. European Union nations also honour prescriptions of other member nation doctors.

As well, there are many situations where prescriptions are given without assessments by a doctor, such as Canada's far north communities where nursing stations are the last line of health care. After great push back from Internet pharmacists, Ottawa's efforts to draft legislation failed.

So MediPlan in Minnedosa kept humming along. It grew to 230 employees, including 16 pharmacists. Its sales topped $100 million per year. Strempler became a local hero. He gave countless people in the area jobs who wouldn't have them otherwise, or else better-paying jobs. Many spouses were now able to provide their families a second income.

Bob Bertram of Minnedosa, who worked at MediPlan as a pharmacist, said the company was a bonanza for the community. "They had their own post office, their own credit-card handling centre. And they were good corporate citizens. They bought uniforms for hockey teams, helped fund the back nine for the golf course," said Bertram.

"A lot of people ask me if I have anything bad to say about them. I don't. They brought pharmacists here from across Manitoba. They had two buildings going, and lot of the pharmacists were young guys just graduated and putting in a lot of overtime to pay off their student loans,"

MaryAnn Mihychuk, the provincial minister for industry, trade and mining at the time, said the MediPlan owners in the beginning were "young, fresh, and innovative."

"I was happy to support them," she said.

She recalled touring the MediPlan plant in Minnedosa. "When I went there, there were many women in their 50s working there, and they were going, 'Oh my gosh, this young man (Strempler) is just the best thing that's ever happened,'" Mihychuk remembered. "He was loved. He brought this optimism into the town."

In 2003, MediPlan opened a second plant in Niverville, 30 kilometres south of Winnipeg. It was a gleaming 18,000-square-foot office costing $1 million. MediPlan was running out of space in Minnedosa, and, of more concern, running out of population from which to draw workers. The Niverville plant was to employ up to 300 people within three years.

The amount of money to be made in online pharmacies triggered a gold rush. At one time, CIPA counted over 150 pharmacies in Manitoba that were dabbling in cross-border sales of prescription drugs, although not all had their own websites. The Manitoba Pharmaceutical Association says there were 70 online pharmacies it knew about -- still an incredibly high number. Most Internet pharmacies were small operators selling by word-of-mouth and some of this selling still exists. But there were about 20 in the province selling on a large scale.

It became so lucrative that even people without pharmaceutical backgrounds opened online pharmacies. Two young Winnipeg entrepreneurs, Glen Voth and Jeremy Charney, looked up an old high school buddy they knew who had gone to pharmacy school. Together, they opened canadamerica.drugs off St. James Street near Polo Park. It employed up to 100 people and would eventually have a facility in Switzerland. Even Phil Kives, founder of K-tel, took a break from selling Veg-o-matics and Miracle Brushes and opened a large online pharmacy. He owned a licensed pharmacy in Winnipeg and was shipping drugs to the U.S. from London.

What kind of cash did Internet pharmacies bring in? It was like a fire hose spraying money across the Manitoba landscape.

At MediPlan, Mark Rzepka and Chantelle Thibodeau Harder earned over $4.5 million together in each of 2003 and 2004, before they divorced in 2005. It was a flat payment out of MediPlan profits. They weren't 30 years of age yet. Less certain is what they got from the sale of their shares in MediPlan that originally cost $100,000. According to an industry insider, the payout came to $8 million. The four players in MediPlan were believed to be equal partners. The couple cashed out their shares on Mar. 24, 2005, as part of their divorce.

"At first, they were just full of piss and vinegar," said one person, of Andrew Strempler and Mark Rzepka. "They were playful and fun. They were enjoying the ride."

The source was one of more than half a dozen people who spoke to the Free Press on the condition of anonymity. These individuals were either once Internet pharmacists or worked with Internet pharmacists. Their reasons for not being identified included the sensitivity of their information, the controversial nature of the business, or simply because they had moved on to other occupations.

But soon the two MediPlan partners, more so Strempler, became unpopular within this new fraternity. Strempler became a "playboy," the person said. He liked jewelry, from diamond-studded rings to Rolex watches. He had a car park full of luxurious cars, including a yellow Lamborghini with an "Rx Boss" licence plate. There were also two Dodge Vipers, a Jaguar, a red-and-white Pontiac GTO, and a Bentley previously owned by Jennifer Lopez.

He bought Leonard Asper's 6,500-square-foot home on Wellington Crescent for $2 million and also owned a condo. He like to fire up big Cohibas, a premium brand of Cuban cigar, at the most inappropriate times. "He was a showboat," said the industry player.

The Rzepkas were less ostentatious but their big buy was a $2-million, 6,800-square-foot home in Pritchard Farm Properties in East St. Paul, that included six bathrooms, a home theatre, and a dance hall.

But for Strempler, it was as if he had no brakes. He would fly regularly by private jet to fly to Las Vegas and play in poker games where a single bet was $5,000. He started to indulge in poker junkets in places such as China. He would fly all over to attend international cigar shows.

Other pharmacists became ticked off. Strempler and Rzepka wouldn't come to meetings of the Canadian Internet Pharmacy Association, the industry's umbrella group, and missed weekly CIPA teleconference calls. "They often had a very arrogant, screw-you position," said a source. Their attitude was one of "because they were first," he said.

"I think (Strempler) thought he was untouchable," maintained Jorgenson, former owner of canadameds.com.

Another person who had extensive dealings with Strempler agreed, saying Strempler didn't seem to think he had to play by the same rules as everyone else. "He had a level of arrogance that I felt uncomfortable with. He lacked humility," the individual said.

The belief he was bulletproof was Strempler's flaw, the individual said. "I have absolutely no doubt that that feeling of invincibility was his downfall."

For people who knew him from an earlier time, this portrait of Strempler seemed like a fiction. Strempler's parents have been a deacon couple in their Mennonite church. Strempler was part of a young adult church group while attending university. Jay Boschman, an established pharmacist who Strempler worked for briefly in Rossburn before starting MediPlan, once told a reporter that he and Strempler shared their Christian beliefs with one another.

Attempts to give Strempler's family in Winnipeg an opportunity to speak, conveyed via relatives, were not successful. Rzepka also declined to be interviewed. Neither did Strempler's Miami lawyer return messages. Winnipeg lawyer Sean Kells, a business partner with Strempler in a non-pharmacy enterprise, did not reply to an interview request.

In a 2005 interview with the New York Times, Strempler's response sounded strangely principled about his luxurious lifestyle, as if to live otherwise would be false.

"I don't hide what I enjoy," he said with a puff on his cigar. "I wouldn't be able to go through life pretending to be what I'm not."

At another point in the interview, Strempler revealed how he saw himself. "I would rather be known as a business revolutionary than the man who got rich," he said.

He added prophetically: "I fully believe we are going to be chased around this globe, and this will not be an easy endeavour."

He was referring to the changing landscape in his industry. Big pharma was starting to squeeze the drug supply to suspected Internet pharmacies. Pfizer cut off MediPlan in 2004, and Merck did the same in early 2005. It was also around this time that MediPlan closed its Niverville plant. The plant never really got off the ground because drug makers were tightening supplies.

Pharmaceutical giants GlaxoSmithKline, Eli Lilly and AstraZeneca followed suit, stopping the supply of drugs to Canada's online pharmacies.

So they turned to other local pharmacies for supplies but were having to pay markups of 15 to 20 per cent. Then big pharma threatened to cut off pharmacies who sold to Internet companies. That started a whole new round in the war. Internet pharmacies started accessing cheaper prescription drugs from around the world, places such as United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Fiji, Greece, Israel, Turkey, India and Syria.

Strempler first moved 35 per cent of his operation to Britain. He also started running a distribution site out of Freeport, Bahamas, taking advantage of its free-trade zone and weaker government oversight. He would access drugs from around the world, have it shipped to a warehouse in Freeport, and fill prescriptions from there. It was the new model.

Jorgenson was vehemently opposed to this process, called trans-shipping. "Andrew was buying drugs from every-effing-where, like on the free trade zone in Hong Kong, the free trade zone in Dubai. It was like buying at a bazaar. There are drugs shipped in from Pakistan and Egypt," he said.

But there was another very serious problem with Strempler's operation. Staff were still taking orders in Minnedosa but he was sourcing his drugs abroad and filling the prescriptions in the Bahamas. At the same time, he was slapping on labels that said the drugs were handled by RxNorth in Canada. That is considered fraud. The prescriptions didn't say the drug had come from Turkey, one of the countries listed in Strempler's eventual criminal charges.

From the Bahamas, the drugs were shipped to the United Kingdom and Dutch Antilles (Curacao), and then to patients in the U.S. It was cheaper to ship through the U.K. and Dutch Antilles and there was less risk of shipments being seized by U.S. officials. The Food and Drug Adminstration had started seizing some product at points of entry from known Internet pharmacy hot spots.

If Strempler had portrayed or marketed the drugs as they were, not obscuring the country of origin, he would not have been found guilty of fraud. CIPA, the umbrella group, sternly warned its members against this practice, fearing customers would lose confidence in the industry.

Strempler didn't heed those warnings. In 2006, FDA agents clad in black balaclavas surrounded Strempler's warehouse in the Bahamas and put locks on the doors. The locks stayed there until all the product expired. Strempler lost $5 million in the seizure. The loss killed his business. But in addition to the seizure, further investigation led to the fraud charges -- two counts of mail fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and wire fraud -- and he was now wanted on a U.S. federal warrant.

The charges applied to drugs Strempler purchased from Turkey and Australia and misrepresented as coming from Canada.

FDA also discovered counterfeit drugs had infiltrated Strempler's shipments. It was certainly not his intention. But he likely had become careless and purchased drugs from some sketchy sources. He set up a system for random testing of drugs with a Chicago-based firm but it was like taking a knife to a gun fight. FDA found 90 per cent of the drugs in one Strempler shipment to the U.S. were counterfeit, according to the Wall Street Journal. The shipment contained fake versions of Arimidex, a breast cancer treatment, and Lipitor, the cholesterol drug.

In the end, Strempler was charged with two counts of mail fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and wire fraud, and was now wanted on a U.S. federal warrant. The charges carried a maximum 20-year prison sentence each. The period of investigation was from January, 2005, to June, 2006.

In Strempler's defence, as someone said, those were "early days" in the industry's sourcing of drugs from abroad. He mis-stepped in the industry's transition to a international procurement model.

There is no question Strempler was a maverick. He was accustomed to defying regulatory authorities from Day 1, as were other Internet pharmacists. That's how the industry started. Strempler received his first warning letter from the FDA in 2001. And ever after, governments and regulatory agencies were trying to shut down the trade. From the perspective of Internet pharmacists such as Strempler, agencies like the FDA and Manitoba Pharmaceutical Association and Manitoba College of Physicians and Surgeons were just trying to preserve the status quo and big pharma's drug pricing practises. In the bigger picture, the Internet pharmacists were exposing the U.S.'s substandard health care for its poorest people.

So in a pattern of defiance, Strempler defied again.

In 2006, after the FDA seizure of his Bahamas warehouse, and the blocking of his credit, Strempler salvaged what he could and sold his MediPlan patient list to Kris Thorkelson, owner of Canada Drugs Ltd., or its Internet name, canadadrugs.com.

The Manitoba Pharmaceutical Association sought disciplinary action against Strempler, piggybacking on the American fraud charges. Strempler dispensed drugs not approved by Health Canada and sold them to Americans labelled as if they originated in Canada, the MPhA said. It also accused Strempler's firm of selling prescription drugs that were close to, or past, their expiry date. Strempler eventually agreed in 2010 to strike his name from the provincial pharmacist registry and pay $7,500.

Shortly after 2006, Strempler and his wife moved to Naranja in Panama, where they lived with their two children until recently. Strempler likely chose Panama for a couple reasons. One is its proximity to his new Internet business called PharmCheck, which sold generic drugs in the free-trade zone on the island of Caracao, off the northern shore of Venezuela. Another reason is that Panama is known for its call centres, much like India. So Strempler ran his pharmacy in Curacao and his call centre in Panama City.

In June 2011, Strempler was arrested in a Miami airport and charged on three counts of fraud. He faced a maximum 60 years in prison and was held without bail. In October 2011, Strempler and his lawyer agreed to a plea bargain. Strempler plead guilty and had his original charges reduced to one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud with a reduced sentence. On Jan. 9, 2013, he was sentenced to four years in prison. Neither does it end there. Big pharma is also seeking $2.6 million in restitution from Strempler.

People have questioned what Strempler was doing in Miami in June 2011 to get himself arrested. After all, he was a wanted man in the United States. It was suicidal to travel to there.

The short story is that Panama deported him to Canada after learning of his outstanding U.S. warrant from Interpol, the intergovernmental police agency. He was then arrested on a stopover in Miami.

But the longer story told to someone who was interviewed by U.S. federal agents is that Strempler was picked up right off the street in Panama by international bounty hunters, sometimes known as 'fugitive recovery agents.' He was apprehended right in front of his wife.

The bounty hunters then transported Strempler to the airport in Panama where two U.S. marshalls were waiting off to the side. The bounty hunters informed Panamanian authorities that Strempler was an international fugitive and they wanted to deport him back to Canada. Panamanian officials, not wanting an international controversy, agreed to the deportation. So Strempler was put on a plane to Toronto but with a stopover in Miami.

It would have seemed like a long plane ride. Strempler was seated between the U.S. marshalls. At that point, said the source, Strempler would have known he would not make it back to Canada. He would have known he would be arrested as soon as the plane touched down in Miami. He would have known he was likely headed to prison. And he would have known he would not be seeing his family again for a very long time.

bill.redekop@freepress.mb.ca

NEXT WEEK: Rise and Fall of Internet Pharmacy in Manitoba, Part 2

Source: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/breakingnews/generation-rx-200693481.html

texas chainsaw massacre nfl playoffs crystal harris Texas A Texas A&m cotton bowl Fiscal cliff deal

Let's put a sales tax on Wall Street | Angry Bear - Financial and ...

I learned of a petition at the presidents site, that one where
anyone can start a petition and have it addressed if you reach
100,000 signatures. We the People it's called. The petition is
sponsored by United Front Against Austerity which also goes by the name Against Austerity.org? I know nothing about this organization,
though I have looked. Thus, I'm remaining without opinion. But, I
do like this one idea of theirs and the idea needs push.



The petition is to have a sales tax
placed on Wall Street's transactions. I think this is a grand idea.
After all, Wall Street and the banks have always referred to their
stuff as ?products?. Finance accounts for over 8% of our GDP,
over 30% of corporate profits. But, mostly financial transactions
are so numerous that the total dollar value makes our GDP look puny.
Our GDP represents 1.9% of the total of the financial sales.?
Of course, not all items would be taxable. It' like food. We don't
tax that.



Many would call this a transaction tax
but, this is the wrong terminology. Wall Street has made it's self
into a producer within our economy. To paraphrase the infamous words
of Larry the Liquidator, they ?make you money?. Odd as it
is, money is what they sell to the consumer. They're a regular
?retail? establishment. At least that's how they view
themselves. So, we should welcome them to such a status by making
them collect and submit biweekly sales tax.??

Sales tax is one of the major methods by which we raise revenue. Everyone knows about sales taxes. It's the tax that is not mentioned when the conservative bitches about those people who don't pay taxes. Well, here's an entire group who truly does not pay the tax every other person pays when they buy something.?

President Obama should love this tax.? He and (too many) other Democrates seem to want a balanced approach with his deficit reduction plan.? A 2 to 1 tax to revenue is often mentioned.? Well, considering sales taxes take up 5 to 7% of the lowest 60% of our population's income (the bottom 20% pay 7%) and the top 1% pays about 0.5%, it seems to me the concept of balancing needs to look here.?

The total sales are estimated to be $5 qaudrillion per year. That's some gross revenue there. That means some major coin in sales tax.?

According to UFAA:?

The Wall Street sales tax is very much in the mainstream. HR-6411, introduced by Congressman Keith Ellison (MN), is gaining support in the US Congress and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders has pledged to introduce such a bill in the US Senate.

So, please go over to the presidents site and sign the petition. It's only good until April 10th. The petition needs another 90,000 signatures. Let's make Obama address this. Spread the word.

Source: http://www.angrybearblog.com/2013/03/lets-put-sales-tax-on-wall-street.html

boardwalk empire iOS 6 Release Date Canelo Alvarez Chavez vs Martinez Yunel Escobar Irish Daily Star Black Mesa

Pat Riley to Danny Ainge: Shut up

NEW ORLEANS (AP) ? Miami Heat President Pat Riley has added another chapter to his rivalry with the Boston Celtics.

After LeBron James complained about calls and Boston Celtics president of basketball operations Danny Ainge chided him for it, Riley lashed back Friday night.

Riley's response: "Danny Ainge needs to shut the (expletive) up and manage his own team."

This saga started Wednesday after Miami's 27-game winning streak ended in Chicago. James told reporters that night that he does not believe some of the hard fouls he takes are "basketball plays." A day later, Ainge told Boston radio station WEEI that "it's almost embarrassing that LeBron would complain about officiating."

Riley was clearly irked, calling Ainge "the biggest whiner going when he was a player."

The Heat and Celtics play April 12 in Miami.

Miami beat New Orleans 108-89 on Friday night, with James leading the way with 36 points. When informed afterward of the statement, James said he appreciated Riley having his back.

"That's who we are," James said. "We ride together, all of us, from the top to the bottom. We all protect each other on and off the floor and it was big-time to see that."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pat-riley-danny-ainge-shut-010424469--spt.html

Kick Ass Torrents jamarcus russell Lone Star College Sloane Stephens Beyonce Lip Sync Star Wars citizens bank

Your Information Marketing Teleseminars Revisited

Process Orders From Your Website in Just 15 Minutes!

Get a COMPLETE system to help you market your online business

www.WebMarketingMagic.com


Cheap Domain Names Registration

Get domains name cheaper than anywhere with 24/7 customer support.

www.UltraCheapDomains.com


Consult With Fred Gleeck

Want to get some advice DIRECTLY from me? Find out how I can help you (one-on-one) with YOUR business. The rates are surprisingly affordable!

www.ConsultWithFred.com

My weekly webinar is a great tool for my joint venture partners to communicate with me and with each other. I?ve been using webinars for a long time now and I?m comfortable with sharing my computer screen as well as giving a spontaneous presentation, responding to questions and allowing others to respond as well.

But you may not like to take on all that responsibility at once. So, teleseminars can be a good alternative, one that new information marketers often prefer.? They are conducted on the telephone instead of a computer, although it is possible to use your computer as your phone, too.

info marketing teleseminar

Your Information Marketing Teleseminars Revisited

Bob Jenkins gives some good teleseminar planning ideas in his post on The Future of Ink, which is geared towards repurposing the recorded presentation. I use this idea to great advantage with webinars, too.

Jenkins says, ?You can rapidly increase your digital publishing when you reduce the time it takes for you to create and publish your content. And my favorite way to do that is starting with teleseminars. Here?s why:

You can speak faster than you can type.

Getting ideas out of your head is likely easier by speaking instead of writing.

You can take an audio recording and repurpose it to create other forms of marketing and customer content. Better still, most of the repurposing can be done by someone else ? freeing up your time to do what you do best!?

His reasons are my reasons, too. I record webinars in order to create and publish content on YouTube and on my website. As Jenkins also suggests for repurposing teleseminars, I use virtual assistants to accomplish all the tasks following my webinars.

Related Articles

Source: http://www.fredgleeck.com/blog/your-information-marketing-teleseminars-revisited/

Gangster Squad school shooting oscar nominations C7 Corvette tom brady denver post Scandal

North Korea says enters "state of war" against South

By Jack Kim

SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea said on Saturday it was entering a "state of war" with South Korea, but Seoul and its ally the United States played down the statement as tough talk.

Pyongyang also threatened to close a border industrial zone, the last remaining example of inter-Korean cooperation which gives the impoverished North access to $2 billion in trade a year.

The United States said it took Pyongyang's threats seriously but cautioned that the North had a history of bellicose rhetoric. Russia, another a permanent U.N. Security Council member, urged all sides to show restraint.

Tensions have been high since the North's new young leader Kim Jong-un ordered a third nuclear weapons test in February, breaching U.N. sanctions and ignoring warnings from North Korea's sole major ally, China, not to do so.

"From this time on, the North-South relations will be entering the state of war and all issues raised between the North and the South will be handled accordingly," a statement carried by the North's official KCNA news agency said.

KCNA said the statement was issued jointly by the North's government, ruling party and other organizations.

The Seoul government said there was nothing in the North's latest statement to cause particular alarm.

"North Korea's statement today ... is not a new threat but is the continuation of provocative threats," the South's Unification Ministry, which handles political ties with the North, said in a statement.

On Friday, Kim signed an order putting the North's missile units on standby to attack U.S. military bases in South Korea and the Pacific, after the United States flew two nuclear-capable stealth bombers over the Korean peninsula in a rare show of force.

U.S. officials described the flight as a diplomatic sortie aimed at reassuring allies South Korea and Japan, and at trying to nudge Pyongyang back to nuclear talks, though there was no guarantee Kim Jong-un would get the message as intended.

The two Koreas have been technically in a state of war since a truce that ended their 1950-53 conflict. Despite its threats, few people see any indication Pyongyang will risk a near-certain defeat by re-starting full-scale war.

There was no sign of unusual activity in the North's military to suggest an imminent aggression, a South Korean defense ministry official said.

CALLS FOR RESTRAINT

White House National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said North Korea's announcement followed a "familiar pattern" of rhetoric [ID:nL2N0CM05W].

Russia, which has often balanced criticism of North Korea, a Soviet-era client state, with calls on the United States and South Korea to refrain from belligerent actions, said a recurrence of war was unacceptable.

"We hope that all parties will exercise maximum responsibility and restraint and no-one will cross the point of no return," Grigory Logvinov, a senior Russian Foreign Ministry official, told Interfax news agency.

France said it was deeply worried about the situation on the Korean peninsula while NATO Deputy Secretary General Alexander Vershbow said the alliance hoped "that this is more posturing than a prelude to any armed hostilities."

China has repeatedly called for restraint on the peninsula.

The North has been threatening to attack the South and U.S. military bases almost on a daily basis since the beginning of March, when U.S. and South Korean militaries started routine drills that have been conducted for decades without incident.

Many in the South have regarded the North's willingness to keep open the Kaesong industrial zone, located just a few miles (km) north of the heavily-militarized border, as a sign that Pyongyang will not risk losing a lucrative source of foreign currency by mounting a real act of aggression.

The Kaesong zone is a vital source of hard currency for the North and hundreds of South Korean workers and vehicles enter daily after crossing the armed border.

"If the puppet traitor group continues to mention the Kaesong industrial zone is being kept operating and damages our dignity, it will be mercilessly shut off and shut down," KCNA quoted an agency that operates Kaesong as saying in a statement.

Closure could also trap hundreds of South Korean workers and managers of the more than 100 firms that have factories there.

The North has previously suspended operations at the factory zone at the height of political tensions with the South, only to let it resume operations later.

North Korea has canceled an armistice agreement with the United States that ended the Korean War and cut all hotlines with U.S. forces, the United Nations and South Korea.

(Additional reporting by Sung-won Shim and Jane Chung; Editing Rosalind Russell and Jon Boyle)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/north-korea-says-enter-state-war-against-south-001304441.html

steelers scarlett johansson tim tebow survivor snl peter frampton Sandy Hook Elementary School Colors

Millennials poised to redefine the auto market

For most automakers, baby boomers are the proverbial 800-pound gorilla that still drives the industry, the biggest buying group in terms of raw vehicle sales and, in particular, the generation spending the most for each of the cars they buy.

But manufacturers are preparing for the arrival of a new group that could soon not only outnumber the boomers but also demand some big changes in the type and size of vehicles the industry produces. Generation Y, also known as the millennials, offer both tantalizing opportunities and major challenges, according to executives at this year?s New York International Auto Show.

Slideshow: The 2013 New York Auto Show

Millennials are becoming ?the new face? of American auto buyers, asserted Jim Farley, Ford Motor Co.?s global sales and marketing chief, during his keynote speech at the auto show. ?And we?ll be surprised,? he added, ?by what they choose.?

According to U.S. Census Bureau data, there are more than 80 million American consumers approaching age 30, which means that each year millions more are moving into the new vehicle buying demographic. Indeed, according to the recent ?Gen Y in the Driver?s Seat? study by consulting firm Deloitte, they already represent about 40 percent of the nation?s potential car buying population ? though they are still well outnumbered by boomers when it comes to the number of new vehicles sold each year.

Chevy Rolls Out New 2014 Camaro

In fact, that ?potential? doesn?t necessarily translate into the same mindset toward buying and owning cars that was seen when boomers came of age. Nearly a third of American 19-year-olds haven?t bothered to get a driver?s license, according to a new study, continuing a downward trend that finds fewer and fewer millennials plugging into the American car culture.

?Virtual contact reduces the need for actual contact,? suggested Michael Sivak, co-author of the study by the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute. ?We found that the percentage of young drivers was inversely related to the availability of the Internet.?

In 1983, well before the advent of texting, e-mail and online gaming, 83 percent of American 19-year-olds were licensed. By 2010, found UMTRI, that was down to around 70 percent.

Another study, jointly carried out by General Motors and Viacom?s MTV Scratch unit, found just 32 percent of 3,000 American millennials surveyed saying they were interested in cars ? though it also showed 69 percnet viewing the purchase of a car a ?milestone? in becoming an adult.

Which brand millennials turn to is also up in the air. Auto data-tracking service Edmunds.com finds that Japanese makers have steadily lost ground with millennials at the expense of Detroit and Korean makers ? a sharp reversal of the trend when baby boomers were first entering the new car market.

?Don?t think we have the millennials figured out," Ford senior marketing executive Amy Marentec recently said, but she added that domestic automakers are beginning to show signs of ?cracking the code.?

The market data suggest that younger buyers are generally more interested in green technology than their parents? generation, something that could drive demand for hybrids, plug-ins and battery vehicles. On the other hand, the higher cost for such technologies is so far restricting sales.

Millennials are downsizing, several executives said. That?s one of the reasons why Audi has such big hopes for the next-generation A3 sedan it showed reporters during a sneak peek in New York. It will become ?the third leg? for the brand, said Audi of America chief Scott Keogh, and should drive other makers to rethink the future of their bigger products.

Booming Sales Put Volkswagen of America Back in the Black

Keogh also emphasized that the new generation of buyers ?isn?t willing to compromise,? even though they?re on a tighter budget than boomers. They expect that even entry-level products have a much higher level of refinement ? and advanced features like infotainment systems capable of accessing social media services.

The new generation has ?an incredible taste for luxury,? echoed Ford?s Farley, adding that millennials now expect to get more for less, no longer expecting that they have to pay a substantial premium for high-line brands. ?And as the price of luxury cars drops,? he said, ?don?t be surprised if they make luxury cars their first (new vehicle) purchase.?

For the industry, delivering on those expectations could be challenging. It could strain resources in the short-term, but those brands which can meet the demand could come to dominate the new generation much as marques like Toyota, Nissan and Honda were the favorites of the boomers.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653351/s/2a24e569/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Cmillennials0Epoised0Eredefine0Eauto0Emarket0E1C9144290A/story01.htm

lucky numbers odds of winning mega millions mary mary sag aftra merger dj am bully bohemian rhapsody

Learn To Travel Like The Pros With These Simple Tips

Just about everyone has to travel somewhere at some point in their lives. While some business or pleasure traveling can be enjoyable, some journeys can be boring, dangerous, expensive and full of hassle. This article contains some tips to make your travel experience better, and help you avoid some of the common pit falls.

Carry meal replacement bars with you when you travel. You never know when an unexpected delay will prevent you from eating a meal. Meal replacement bars are compact and easy to carry. An additional benefit of these bars, is that it will allow you to keep your typical meal schedule. This can help reduce jet lag, and keep your spirits up when faced with irritating delays.

Consider attaching small bells to your carry-on bag. If you are worried that someone might steal or tamper with your luggage during a flight, attach bells to it. Inexpensive, Christmas jingle bells will do nicely. The noise is likely to deter criminals. If not, the noise will draw your attention.

Look into alternatives to hotels. You may be able to find a beautiful bed and breakfast that just might make your vacation a bit more relaxing than the traditional hotel. They tend to be more quiet and quaint while offering some wonderful perks during your stay. It could be a bit more of a romantic getaway than the hotel. If you can't decide where to travel, just search on the internet about where to go.

A great travel tip is to always bring printed directions with you whenever you go on a road trip. GPS devices are great, but they can sometimes go haywire. They might lead you down the wrong road or tell you to take the wrong turn. You can avoid this by consulting your printed directions.

When traveling always let someone know where you are going and when you will return. If you're gone longer than expected follow up with that person. This simple step is a valuable safety measure. The person can follow up if you don't return on schedule. They will also know how to reach you if an emergency comes up back home.

Have a better road trip by actually going with people you actually enjoy being around. Don't plan on traveling this way unless there is some kind of friendly relationship between you and the people who would be going with you. Good companionship makes for a quicker and more enjoyable road trip for everyone involved.

Bring an over the door shoe organizer along whenever you're staying in a hotel. Being an organized traveler in a hotel can be tough. There is limited drawer, counter, and closet space. Keep your bathroom essentials, shoes, and accessories organized and in clean site by putting them in your shoe organizer as soon as you arrive.

Plan your trip early and use the time to sign up for newsletters from hotels, car rentals and airlines. Use a junk email account to handle the potential clutter but take advantage of any specials that might come your way. These newsletters will often offer discounts and specials that are not available to the general public yet.

You always want to make sure there is a barf bag accessible to you. People can become nauseous and throw up at the drop of a dime on an airplane. Even if you are not feeling ill, you never know how the person sitting next to you is going to react to the turbulence.

When traveling by plane you should bring a light jacket with you if you get chilly easily. Airplanes are typically somewhat cool and often have fans blowing air for greater circulation which can make them feel even cooler. Light blankets are often handed out but they typically do not keep much warmth.

When traveling, never take an item from someone to transport it for them. No matter their situation or how nice they may seem, this is almost always a trap to convince an unwary tourist to transport drugs or other contraband into secure areas. Even "gifts" can fall into this category.

If your cellphone will not cover long distance from the place you intend to travel to, it might be a smart idea to invest in a phone card before leaving. A phone card will make calls much less expensive and ensure that you don't accidentally make any expensive long distance calls.

If you are traveling on a cruise ship, consider departing from a "drive-up port". This option saves you money, but you might have trouble parking. Get there one day before you leave and keep your car in the hotel's lot for the length of your trip. Most hotels in these areas advertise this perk, but if you don't see it, ask about it when you call.

The next time you need to travel somewhere, be it a quick local trip with your family, a business trip or a long distance journey abroad, consider referring back to the tips in this article. By utilising some of the ideas and advice mentioned, your travelling adventure could be cheaper, easier and safer.

About the Author:
Read More On Dominik Mikula's webpage to read more about this article Get more info.

Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Learn-To-Travel-Like-The-Pros-With-These-Simple-Tips/4512925

Waldo Canyon fire nba finals K Michelle roger clemens multiple sclerosis falling skies rodney king

Dozens of teachers indicted in cheating scandal

By David Beasley

ATLANTA (Reuters) - A grand jury indicted 35 former Atlanta public school educators, including an award-winning former superintendent, on Friday for allegedly conspiring to cheat on standardized test scores to obtain cash bonuses.

Former Superintendent Beverly Hall was named National Superintendent of the Year by the American Association of School Administrators in 2009, the same year prosecutors contend widespread cheating took place.

Hall received a $78,000 bonus that year for improving the school system's test scores, prosecutors said.

"The money she received, we are alleging, was ill gotten and it was theft," Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard said at a news conference.

Besides Hall, those indicted included administrators, principals and teachers. The 65-count indictment said "test answer sheets were altered, fabricated and falsely certified."

Hall was charged with racketeering, making false statements, theft by taking and false swearing. She and others could face up to 45 years in prison if convicted, Howard said.

A state investigation of test results in 2009 found cheating in 44 of the 56 Atlanta public schools examined. The cheating was prompted primarily by pressure to meet targets in a data-driven environment, according to a investigation conducted by Georgia Governor Nathan Deal's office.

The 2009 cheating was said to include teachers erasing incorrect answers on state standardized tests.

The 2011 state report concluded that there was a "major failure of leadership throughout Atlanta Public Schools with regard to the ethical administration" of the 2009 standardized exams known as the Criterion-Referenced Competency Tests.

Amid the investigation, Hall stepped down after nearly 12 years as superintendent of the Atlanta Public Schools. Her successor, Erroll Davis, said on Friday the school system now has extensive training and other safeguards to prevent cheating.

He said 95 percent of the school system's staff was not implicated in the scandal.

Justina Collins, the mother of an Atlanta public school student, told the news conference her daughter had trouble reading yet scored well on the standardized tests.

Collins said when she asked the superintendent about the discrepancy, Hall told her, "Your daughter is simply the kind of person who tests well."

Collins' daughter is now in the ninth grade but reads on a fifth-grade level, Howard told reporters, adding that the real victims of the cheating scandal were the children.

"Her example points out the plight of many children" in the scandal, said the prosecutor.

Richard Deane, Hall's attorney, could not be reached for comment.

(Editing by Ian Simpson and Todd Eastham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/former-atlanta-schools-chief-others-indicted-cheating-scandal-010308965.html

dick cheney heart umf elite eight stephon marbury the lion king suzanne collins cherry blossom festival

Saturday, March 30, 2013

EPA taking aim at auto emissions, sulfur in gas

FILE - In this July 10, 2012 file photo, Suzanne Meredith, of Walpole, Mass., gases up her car at a Gulf station in Brookline, Mass. Reducing sulfur in gasoline and tightening emissions standards on cars beginning in 2017, as the Obama administration is proposing, would come with costs as well as rewards. (AP Photo/Steven Senne, File)

FILE - In this July 10, 2012 file photo, Suzanne Meredith, of Walpole, Mass., gases up her car at a Gulf station in Brookline, Mass. Reducing sulfur in gasoline and tightening emissions standards on cars beginning in 2017, as the Obama administration is proposing, would come with costs as well as rewards. (AP Photo/Steven Senne, File)

(AP) ? Reducing sulfur in gasoline and tightening emissions standards on cars beginning in 2017, as the Obama administration is proposing, would come with costs as well as rewards. The cost at the pump for cleaner air across the country could be less than a penny or as high as 9 cents a gallon, depending on who is providing the estimate.

An oil industry study says the proposed rule being unveiled Friday by the administration could increase gasoline prices by 6 cents to 9 cents a gallon. The Environmental Protection Agency estimates an increase of less than a penny and an additional $130 to the cost of a vehicle in 2025.

The EPA is quick to add that the change aimed at cleaning up gasoline and automobile emissions would yield billions of dollars in health benefits by 2030 by slashing smog- and soot-forming pollution. Still, the oil industry, Republicans and some Democrats have pressed the EPA to delay the rule, citing higher costs.

Environmentalists hailed the proposal as potentially the most significant in President Barack Obama's second term.

The so-called Tier 3 standards would reduce sulfur in gasoline by more than 60 percent and reduce nitrogen oxides by 80 percent, by expanding across the country a standard already in place in California. For states, the regulation would make it easier to comply with health-based standards for the main ingredient in smog and soot. For automakers, the regulation allows them to sell the same autos in all 50 states.

The Obama administration already has moved to clean up motor vehicles by adopting rules that will double fuel efficiency and putting in place the first standards to reduce the pollution from cars and trucks blamed for global warming.

"We know of no other air pollution control strategy that can achieve such substantial, cost-effective and immediate emission reductions," said Bill Becker, executive director of the National Association of Clean Air Agencies. Becker said the rule would reduce pollution equal to taking 33 million cars off the road.

But the head of American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers, Charles Drevna, said in an interview Thursday that the refiners' group was still unclear on the motives behind the agency's regulation, since refining companies already have spent $10 billion to reduce sulfur by 90 percent. The additional cuts, while smaller, will cost just as much, Drevna said, and the energy needed for the additional refining actually could increase carbon pollution by 1 percent to 2 percent.

"I haven't seen an EPA rule on fuels that has come out since 1995 that hasn't said it would cost only a penny or two more," Drevna said.

A study commissioned by the American Petroleum Institute estimated that lowering the sulfur in gasoline would add 6 cents to 9 cents a gallon to refiners' manufacturing costs, an increase that likely would be passed on to consumers at the pump. The EPA estimate of less than 1 cent is also an additional manufacturing cost and likely to be passed on.

A senior administration official said Thursday that only 16 of 111 refineries would need to invest in major equipment to meet the new standards, which could be final by the end of this year. Of the remaining refineries, 29 already are meeting the standards because they are selling cleaner fuel in California or other countries, and 66 would have to make modifications.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the rule was still undergoing White House budget office review.

___

Follow Dina Cappiello on Twitter: https://twitter.com/dinacappiello

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-29-EPA-Cleaner%20Gasoline/id-694e405d989846428f5629495a29a200

don cornelius whitney houston i will always love you breaking news whitney houston carmen whitney houston last performance cpac straw poll i will always love you

Philadelphian jumps on tracks to help fallen man

In this still image taken from security video provided by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA), Christopher Knafelc jumps off a subway platform in north Philadelphia to help a man who fell onto the tracks Thursday afternoon, March 28, 2013. Knafelc, 32, jumped down to help the man, knowing that a train would be arriving in a few minutes. Train traffic was halted and the man was taken to a hospital and listed in stable condition. (AP Photo/SEPTA)

In this still image taken from security video provided by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA), Christopher Knafelc jumps off a subway platform in north Philadelphia to help a man who fell onto the tracks Thursday afternoon, March 28, 2013. Knafelc, 32, jumped down to help the man, knowing that a train would be arriving in a few minutes. Train traffic was halted and the man was taken to a hospital and listed in stable condition. (AP Photo/SEPTA)

In this Thursday, March 28, 2013 photo, Christopher Knafelc, who rescued a man who had fallen off the platform in a north Philadelphia subway station, is photographed during an interview in a transit police office in Philadelphia. Knafelc, 32, jumped down onto the tracks to help the man, knowing that a train would be arriving in a few minutes. Train traffic was halted and the man was taken to a hospital and listed in stable condition. (AP Photo/Philadelphia Daily News, Brian X. McCrone) THE EVENING BULLETIN OUT, TV OUT; MAGS OUT; NO SALES

(AP) ? A recovering drug addict with a long rap sheet who was hailed as a hero for jumping onto subway tracks to rescue a man who walked off a platform deflected the praise Friday by saying he was just doing the "right thing."

Still, Christopher Knafelc suggested that he views the good deed he did, and the praise that followed, as another sign that he is on the right path in life.

"It did help reinforce that I'm a good person," Knafelc told The Associated Press in an interview at his mother's south Philadelphia apartment. "I questioned that a lot because of my colorful past."

Knafelc, 32, had just sat down to wait for a train at a north Philadelphia station on Thursday afternoon when he saw a man flail and fall off the platform and onto the tracks. He said he instinctively jumped down to help, knowing that a train would be arriving in a few minutes.

He called up to people on the platforms to get the trains stopped and he held the man's head and neck stable until firefighters arrived. Train traffic was halted.

"I don't see it as being heroic. I just see it as doing the right thing," Knafelc said.

Knafelc said he has battled substance abuse ? including heroin and the powerful pain drug Oxycontin ? since he was in middle school in Baden, a small town outside Pittsburgh, and spent years in and out of rehab.

"I created a pretty deep hole to come out of," he said.

Court records show Knafelc pleaded guilty in 2010 in Pennsylvania to charges of theft, driving under the influence, child endangerment and driving without a license. Two years ago, he came to Philadelphia, where his mother and a cousin live, to get a fresh start, he said.

He said he has been sober since 10 days after his daughter's birth in July 2010, when he picked her up from her crib and she smiled at him.

"That was the most powerful thing I've ever felt in my life to this day," Knafelc said. "It was better than any high from drugs."

Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority spokeswoman Jerri Williams said she spoke with Knafelc soon after his heroics.

"He's clean and sober for about 2 1/2 years but still trying to get his life together," she said. "I think by doing this good Samaritan deed he's kind of surprised himself."

Williams said she saw that as Knafelc recounted the incident on the tracks, "I could see the light go off, the a-ha moment" when he realized that after he was helped by many people in his past, he was able to finally help someone else in return.

"This almost instinctive move to save this guy made him see 'I am a good person,'" Williams said. "It's amazing. This incident may be the start of really good things for him."

Knafelc agreed with that assessment, and he connected the help he's been given by family members to survive his addiction with the favor he did the man on the tracks Thursday.

"I'll never be able to repay them, financially or any other way," Knafelc said. "The next best thing I can do is pay it forward."

Investigators do not know what caused the man to fall on the tracks. Surveillance video shows him walking slowly toward the platform's edge and then over it. He was taken to a hospital and listed in stable condition.

___

Associated Press researcher Judith Ausuebel contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-29-US-Philly-Subway-Hero/id-98e7e5b048fa4493b83aabab673bacef

Hunter Hayes Movember USC shooting halloween chipotle lsu football lsu football

France's Hollande Hits Companies With 75% Wealth Tax

French President Francois Hollande declared on Thursday that companies would have to pay a 75 percent tax on salaries over a million euros after his plan for a "super-tax" on individuals was knocked down by the constitutional court.

Hollande, battling to win back support as his economic goals fall away within a year of his election, said shifting the millionaires' tax onto companies would be a way of getting the wealthiest French to contribute to ending the crisis.

"I am sticking by my pledge," Hollande said, during an hour-long interview on primetime television where he urged a disillusioned nation to trust that he was doing all he could to get the stalled economy back on its feet.

On the defensive, with his approval ratings in tatters, Hollande acknowledged he had failed to anticipate the crisis dragging on for so long, but all the tools were being put in place to restore growth and bring down unemployment.

Anxious to get left-wingers back behind him, the Socialist leader said that despite his effort to reduce the public deficit in a climate of stalled growth, no new taxes or tax hikes would be imposed on households this year or next.

He warned, however, that the French would have to work longer under a pension overhaul being worked on for next year in order to reduce a gaping deficit in the retirement system.

"My first objective is to reverse the unemployment rate," Hollande said, explaining that he was gunning for the relentless rise of past years to come to a stop at the end of the year and for the 10.6 percent jobless rate to start falling from then.

He said measures in place to trim companies' labour costs via tax rebates, a plan to loosen hiring and firing rules and his intention to simplify regulations that strangle small businesses provided all the tools for a recovery.

"This is not a wish, nor is it a forecast. It's a commitment and a battle," he said, adding: "I am the chief of this battle."

The TV interview is part of a new public relations push that has included a two-day, hand-shaking tour in southeast France. The trip backfired when hecklers asked what had become of campaign pledges and one protester was carted off by police.

Hollande's ratings have slid faster than those of any other French president as he has irked left-wingers with pro-market measures to foster growth, angered business leaders with high taxes and failed to stem the rise in unemployment.

His government has backtracked on its growth and deficit targets, and few believe the job market is close to recovering.

Thursday's resurrection of the 75 percent tax saved Hollande some face after the Constitutional Court crushed what had been his most high-profile campaign promise to his left-wing base.

Approval at 25 Percent

The carefully stage-managed interview looked set to be upset by news a few hours earlier that actress Julie Gayet had filed a legal complaint for breach of privacy over rumours on the Internet alleging a romantic liaison with the president.

However no reference was made to a complaint the Paris prosecutor's office said it received from Gayet on March 18 against "persons unknown" over rumours circulating online for some weeks. A lawyer for Gayet, cited in French media as saying the rumours were baseless, did not respond to phone calls and Hollande's office declined to comment.

Hollande, 58, has already suffered media speculation over his relationship with first lady Valerie Trierweiler. The pair are unmarried but have been together for several years.

Negative publicity would hurt Hollande today, with just 22 percent of respondents in a survey by pollster CSA on Thursday rating him a "good" president and 51 percent rating him "bad".

Separately, an LH2 poll for Le Nouvel Observateur weekly gave him a 27 percent approval rating and found 81 percent of people were unhappy with his efforts on jobs.

Data this week showed households' purchasing power fell in late 2012 for the first time since 1984 and that jobless claims rose for a 22nd straight month in February to reach the highest level since June 1997, amid a stream of industrial layoffs.

National statistics institute INSEE sees unemployment rising to 11 percent by mid-year, making Hollande's insistence that he can reverse the trend by year-end sound hollow.

(Additional reporting by Chine Labbe, Elizabeth Pineau and Ingrid Melander, edited by Michael Roddy)

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/100602779

new orleans weather sparkle sacagawea new hope baptist church associated press foster friess new orleans hornets

Friday, March 29, 2013

Marvelous Car Games Designed For Kids - Launching Mom


Niche markets . different kinds of sports games which usually played by maintaining of all age brackets all around society. Many team sports like soccer, basket ball, hockey cricket also rugby are viewed by many kids of all age teams. Extreme sports like car racing, skiing, mountaineering and then bungee jumping are played by maintaining who are near attaining adulthood. Athletics events as an example high jump, rather long jump, golf and then weightlifting, diving as skiing are tried by people just about all age -groups desire entertainment, recreation and enhances one's selection abilities .
It again is all almost saving money yesterday and to have so you sometimes have to get inventive. If perhaps you want to be save on costly services you could very well need to get your thinking lumbar to cheap options to. Learn why to get labor on car repair, auto individual repair, and renovation.
My main target coming from all board game manufacturers are children. Studies show which in turn such type from free car games enhances most of their ability to recognize, focus and cure. It furthermore develops their dexterity and improves face coordination that is going to help them get through life in the role of they grow old. It much tutors them back in adapting better reading and mathematical tips required for children to pass dojo.
car games
Your current Internet continued to develop and site browsers became as well as more more sophisticated. People started implementing games that intended web browsers to be a client. HTML, JavaScript, ASP, PHP, MySQL and thus FLASH technologies offer now progressed to finally such a feature that many of the games generated in the eighties and 90's include now available to actually play for free online.
Attests that the creators the popularity of auctions for excavator in the market. The actual buyers of kind of equipments were far from Australia and Nz. The trend has encouraged a conductors of that auction that offer decided to set up such auction situations for heavy materials very frequently. Most of these web based sites announce here are the the full product that will build up for bidding, to be honest ahead of each of our scheduled date for the auction.
car games charm to myarticlenetwork of all ages, from fairly kids to those of fairly advanced decades. Common players of racing games state how the games signify a great means to de-stress and de-stress after a hard day at school or labor.
Locale the Distinction Online flash games for children: Throughout these kinds related girly games, my user is supplied with two family pictures. One popular is the correct picture. A person's second image, may possibly be a lesser sibling from the incredibly 1 but which has around 10 issues. The grinder has to determine out these various spots. Click on these spaces to total some second photo.
Because you progress in their domain of Motorcar video games as Dora video gaming programs the level trouble increases. You start off from off at the elementary degree so that you progress some of the phases progress just as effectively. Here retains you decided and wanting to reach the future higher education degree with the stint of your credentials and knowledge here at currently being to be able to maneuver the field.

Source: http://launchingmom.com/xn/detail/6443128%3ABlogPost%3A19184?xg_source=activity

soylent green phil davis george st pierre aldon smith friday night lights nick santino bruce arians

Stuck in an exercise rut? | Ana Alexandre, Life Coach, Nutritionist

We know the benefits of exercise.? We know when we start to exercise, how awesome we start to feel.

So why do we stop?

The biggest reason is a lack of motivation. We can get really excited about starting, and after a few weeks, the excitement is gone. So how do we stay motivated?

How to saty motivated to exercise

1. Do something you enjoy

Yes. Exercise can be and should be something you look forward to. If you hate running, don?t sign up for a race in the hopes of forcing yourself to train for it. You will be bored out of your mind and you won?t stick to it. Find activities you like and actually want to do.

2. Schedule it

Sit down with your schedule at the beginning of every week. Where can you fit in your workouts? Write it down. Treat it as you would any other appointment. Show up. This may not seem as urgent as other commitments in your calendar, but it is.? This is time for YOU.

3. Spice it up

Doing the same workouts over and over can get really boring. And if you never change up your routine, you will hit a plateau.? You will stop getting results.? Talk about un-motivating. Variety is super important to stay motivated in ALL areas of life. Would you enjoy eating the same dinner everyday, wearing the same outfit every Monday, or having sex the same way every time? Probably not. You gotta change it up. Try a new class at the gym, try a different yoga style, get off the treadmill to take it out side, and change up your resistance training routine.

4. Be social

Turn your social calendar into active + social.? Have a regular Saturday morning coffee date with your girl friends? Why not a Spin class + coffee date. Signup for dance classes with your man, join a run club, learn to ski, or go hiking with our family. Making exercise fun can really change the way you look and health and fitness.

5. Change your perspective

The way you look at exercise is really the key to staying motivated long term. This is the REAL secret. Work on this one, and the rest will come naturally.

When you hear the words exercise, or workout what do you think?

Boring, I?d rather be doing something else, I hate this, only do it because I have to, I wish I could be thin without it.

OR Do you think: I feel great and healthy, I take time to love my body, I have more energy, I feel beautiful when I exercise.

The more time you spend in the positive perspective, the easier it is to stay motivated and to create a life where health and fitness is a natural part of it.

In the comments below, share which one of these steps you?re going to try this week.

?

?

Source: http://www.anaalexandre.com/stuck-in-an-exercise-rut/

Stuart Scott Holly Rowe Chief Keef FRANK ZAMBONI Tiffany Six aaliyah jodie foster

Focused On Women, Sprightly Debuts A Visual Content Platform Showing What's Hot Across Fashion, Beauty, Design Sites & More

sprightly-logoSprightly, a newly launching startup whose founding team has an extensive history working in female-focused businesses, including Refinery29, Etsy, Chloe+Isabel, and others, is debuting its content aggregation platform on Monday, with a focus on verticals like fashion, beauty, design, decor, and more. TechCrunch has early invites (see below).

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/QnVVUQLyc5U/

Dana Vollmer phillies phillies Ryan Dempster Phelps NBC Olympics Live Olympic medal count

Thursday, March 28, 2013

House watcher Stx - USVI Moving Center

Anyone know the going rate for watching a house for a few months while the owner is away? Not property mgmt, just checking on the place once per week to be sure no issues exist and that all is well. No maintenance required, no house sitting required. Thanks.

Source: http://www.vimovingcenter.com/talk/read.php?4,200455,200455

cruise ship Asteroid 2012 DA14 Reeva Steenkamp rubio Affenpinscher Dorner Banana Joe