Tuesday, March 23, 2010

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)




The cost of defying Obamacare by withholding compliance on your income tax return will not be for the faint hearted – families will be forced to cough up $2,250 a month while being closely scrutinized by an army of new IRS agents with fresh “combat training,” armed to the teeth with 12 gauge pump action shotguns.

“The Internal Revenue Service will function as the government’s chief enforcer for health care reform, should President Obama sign the bill into law as expected, monitoring both businesses and individuals to certify whether they have the insurance coverage the government requires,” writes Matt Cover of CNS News.

The penalties associated with defying mandatory health care are staggering. From 2014 onwards, for every month that individuals or businesses with over 50 employees fail to carry a minimum level of health insurance, they will be hit with fines of up to $750 a month for individuals and $750 per uncovered employee for businesses. For a family of four, this could amount to a whopping $27,000 a year ($2250 a month for each household).

Read more...

*Democracy No Longer Free: First Corporate Campaign Ads Appear After Supreme Court's Citizens United Decision

*Netanyahu is Loud and Clear: We Will Continue To Build

*Lawmakers Eyeing National ID Card

*US Halts Poppy Eradication in Afghan Areas

*US may try Cindy Sheehan for anti-war campaign

*America's Most Underwater Housing Markets

*VIDEO: Michael Moore: Healthcare Bill “A Victory for Capitalism”


*Judge won't force Miss. district to hold prom

earlier:







Despite laws prohibiting their trade, tools used for torture are being exported by some European countries to regimes around the world, with little regard for human rights, Amnesty International claims.

EU law expressly prohibits the export or import of goods that have no practical use other than for the purpose of capital punishment or torture, but the lack of enforcement means countries like Germany, the Czech Republic, Spain and Italy are still selling torture instruments abroad – to countries where there is documented proof of the use of such equipment for torture.

“Pepper sprays can be used by police officers in the situations of extreme violence, but they can also be misused, and they widely are in many places for torture and ill treatment,” says Mike Lewis from Amnesty International. “But there is also another category of equipment that we see being marketed by European firms, and in some cases imported into the European Union. Devices that have no other use but for torture and ill treatment – devices like electric shock belts.”

The organization is talking about devices like fixed wall restraints, metal thumb cuffs, spiked batons and sleeves and cuffs that can deliver electric shocks to about 50,000 volts.

Amnesty also says that in the last four years, the Czech Republic issued export permits for foot and hand shackles, electric shock tools and chemical sprays to countries where police and security forces are known to use them for torture. It named the counties such as Senegal, Cameroon, Pakistan, Moldova and Georgia.

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*Supreme Court Battle Quietly Brews Over Possible Future Nominations

*Illegal US immigrant detention practices questioned. Part 1







*Airport device follows fliers' phones

*Unclean Water Claims More Lives Than War

*Norman Finkelstein Responds to Clinton, Netanyahu AIPAC Comments


*Walls come down on age for over-55 communities

*Jane Hamsher: The Sober Reality of Health Care Reform

*France tells Greece: Broke? Buy a few warships

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