Wednesday, February 25, 2015

HEAR OUT ISRAEL'S LEADER - SENATOR JOSEPH LIEBERMAN

"HEAR OUT ISRAEL'S LEADER

THIS IS ABOUT DETERMINING HOW BEST TO STOP IRAN FROM GETTING NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND NOT JUST ANOTHER WASHINGTON TEST OF PARTISAN AND POLITICAL LOYALTY."

SENATOR JOSEPH LIEBERMAN


Monday, February 23, 2015

Oscars 2015 : Best-dressed stars on the red carpet


                                         Julianne Moore 
                                 (Best Actress- Still Alice)


Anna Kendrick 



Zoe Saldana 



Jennifer Lopez 


Rosamund Pike
(Best Actress Nominee- Gone Girl)


Emma Stone
(Best Supporting Actress Nominee- Bird Man)


Jennifer Aniston



Gwyneth Paltrow




Felicity Jones 
(Best Actress Nominee- The Theory of Everything)



Reese Witherspoon
(Best Actress Nominee- Wild)



Sienna Miller 



Scarlett Johansson 



Marion Cotillard
(Best Actress Nominee- Two Days, One Night)


Jenna Dewan Tatum
(Wife of Channing Tatum)



Patricia Arquette 
(Best Supporting Actress- Boyhood)



Nicole Kidman



Chloe Grace Moretz


Laura Dern  
(Best Supporting Actress Nominee- Wild)


Tegan and Sara



Karolina Kurkova 


Cheryl Hines 



Kerry Washington



Lupita Nyong'o 



Chrissy Teigen



Zendaya



Dakota Johnson 
(Fifty shades of Grey fame)



Naomi Watts


Jamie Chung 



Blanca Blanco 





Friday, February 13, 2015

Did you know that / Did you know facts II



Did you know that most commonly used letter in the alphabet is E

Did you know that the least used letter in the alphabet is Q

Did you know that the 3 most common languages in the world are Mandarin Chinese, Spanish and English

Did you know that dreamt is the only word that ends in mt

Did you know that the names of all continents both start and end with the same letter

Did you know that if you try to say the alphabet without moving your lips or tongue every letter will sound the same

Did you know that a cat has 32 muscles in each ear

Did you know that Perth is Australia's windiest city

Did you know that Elvis's middle name was Aron

Did you know that the flag for Libya is unlike any other being a solid green color

Did you know that goldfish can see both infrared and ultraviolet light

Did you know that the smallest bones in the human body are found in your ear

Did you know that cats spend 66% of their life asleep

Did you know that Switzerland eats the most chocolate equating to 10 kilos per person per year

Did you know that money is the number one thing that couples argue about

Did you know that stewardessess is the longest word that is typed with only the left hand

Did you know that each time you see a full moon you always see the same side

Monday, February 9, 2015

Did you know that / Did you know facts



Did you know that 11% of people are left handed
Did you know that August has the highest percentage of births

Did you know that unless food is mixed with saliva you can't taste it

Did you know that the average person falls asleep in 7 minutes

Did you know that a bear has 42 teeth

Did you know that an ostrich's eye is bigger than it's brain

Did you know that most lipsticks contain fish scales

Did you know that no two corn flakes look the same

Did you know that lemons contain more sugar than strawberries

Did you know that 8% of people have an extra rib

Did you know that 85% of plant life is found in the ocean

Did you know that Ralph Lauren's original name was Ralph Lifshitz

Did you know that rabbits like licorice

Did you know that the Hawaiian alphabet has 12 letters

Did you know that 'Topolino' is the name for Mickey Mouse Italy

Did you know that a lobsters blood is colorless but when exposed to oxygen it turns blue

Did you know that armadillos have 4 babies at a time and are all the same sex

Did you know that reindeer like bananas

Did you know that the longest recorded flight of a chicken was 13 seconds

Did you know that birds need gravity to swallow

Sunday, February 8, 2015

Lower Taxes, Higher Revenue

Now that we had discussed previuosly about auto insurance,loans,claims,and credits.Let's discuss an important concept from economics, the Laffer Curve.This concept is named after the man who developed it, Arthur Laffer, a major American economist who has taught at the University of Chicago, University of Southern California and elsewhere.

The Laffer Curve illustrates the two most important things we need to know about taxes:

1.how much money the government can raise from taxes
2.At what level of taxation the government might start getting less, not more, revenue.

The Laffer Curve is illustrated here by a two-dimensional graph. The horizontal line is the tax rate that the government chooses, and the vertical line is the revenue that the government receives from that tax rate.First, because zero times any number is zero, if the tax rate is zero, the government receives zero revenue.



Accordingly, zero-zero is our first point on the curve.
Now suppose the government chooses a very small tax rate, say 1 percent. The government will then begin to receive some revenue from citizens. This means that another point on the curve must be something like a bit higer than zero-zero.Now suppose the government charges a 2 percent tax rate, then, everyone would agree,that it will receive even more revenue and if the government keeps raising the rate, then revenue will continue to go up,at least when we're in the low-tax-rate part of the graph.This means that if we fill in the curve, it has an upward slope -- at least when we're in the low-tax-rate-part of the graph.

Now suppose the government charges a 100% tax rate. If this happens, then no one would work.Why would anyone work when the government is going to take all the money that they make? And if no one works, then the national income will be zero. This means that government revenue will be 100% of zero, or zero. This means that another point on the curve must be at the other end of semicircle.

Now let's complete the curve. And when we do, we see that the curve must have a hump.That is, it has to have a hump -- because.This is simply because the revenue line has to go up in the low tax rate part of the graph and has to start going down to reach the point we drew at the 100 percent tax rate.But if the curve slopes downward it implies something remarkable -- something that few of those who push for higher and higher taxes want to admit. It means that when tax rates are high, if you make them higher, you'll actually bring in less revenue to the government.This has in fact occurred in practice. For instance, during the Great Depression, when Congress passed the Hawley-Smoot tariff bill, although the bill raised taxes on imported goods, the revenue that came from those taxes actually decreased.

A more recent example occurred in the early 1980s. After President Reagan and Congress drastically reduced the tax rates on the rich, the tax revenue that came from the rich actually increased.All economists -- even the most leftwing ones -- agree that the true Laffer Curve, the one that reflects real life, has a hump, and that therefore the curve has a downward sloping part, meaning at some point tax revenues start going down when you increase rates.So where, then, do economists disagree?

They disagree about exactly where the hump occurs.The hump occurs somewhere around the 70% tax rate. But apparently I was taught something wrong!

New evidence from an unexpected source suggests that the hump occurs at a much lower tax rate, something around 33 percent.That source is a study by Christina Romer and her husband David Romer. Both are economics professors at University of California Berkeley. Christina Romer was the chairman of President Barack Obama's Council of Economic advisors. In other words, the study was written by one of the most influential liberal economists in the United States. And it was published in the American Economic Review, the most widely respected economics journal in the world.This study examined how national income responds to tax rates.

But as far as what concerns us here, the key point is that, if you do the math, the results imply that the hump on the Laffer Curve occurs where the tax rate is around 33 percent -- much lower than economists previously thought.Let's now put these findings into political terms. They suggest, that no matter what your politics, you should not want tax rates to be above 33 percent. Obviously, conservatives and many moderates think rates should be lower than that. But even if you are an extreme leftwinger and your only goal is to make government as big as possible -- you should still oppose a tax rate higher than 33 percent The reason is that, as the Romer & Romer study suggests, when tax rates go higher than that, the government actually gets less money.

Everyone of every political persuasion should pay attention to the Romer and Romer Study and its important implication They suggest that if we decrease tax rates, government revenues might actually rise.


Tuesday, February 3, 2015

How to Buy Car Insurance.

How to Buy Car Insurance.

Follow these helpful hints before you sign on the dotted line.

You will need A credit report, Knowledge of local law ,Careful consideration and Competing quotes optional Extra coverage.



Step 1. Check your credit report for errors.
Insurance companies use your credit rating to help determine your rate. Request a copy of your credit report by logging onto annualcreditreport.com or by calling 1-877-322-8228. You are entitled to one free copy per year.

Step 2. Find out the minimum car insurance required by law on your state’s Department of Insurance web site.
Only New Hampshire and Wisconsin don’t require car insurance. But since they do require people to pay for accidents they cause, many people carry it anyway.

Step 3. Consider buying more liability insurance than your state requires.
Consumer groups recommend a minimum of $100,000 for injuries per person,$300,000 per accident, and $100,000 in property-damage liability. Most American car insurance does not cover you if you’re driving outside the United States. Some policies are valid in Canada and Mexico, but check if your coverage meets those countries’ requirements.

Step 4. Collision coverage pays for the repair or replacement of your vehicle.
If your car is more than five years old or worth less than $4,000, it may not be worth it.

Step 5. Comprehensive coverage covers you if someone steals your vehicle or if it’s damaged by a windstorm, fire, hail, or vandalism. But if your car is more than 12 years old, unless it’s a valuable vintage set of wheels, the cost may outweigh the potential benefit.

Step 6. Weigh the advantage of other add-ons, such as extra medical coverage, emergency roadside assistance, and glass breakage. Consider buying uninsured or underinsured motorist protection,even if your state doesn’t require it. This provision protects you if someone with no insurance causes a collision with you.

Step 7. Shop around.
Get a general quote from an insurance company’s web site by plugging in basic information like your zip code and car model. Some web sites offer quotes from several companies so you can compare rates.Just be aware that these quotes reflect a bare-bones policy with no add-ons.

Step 8. Once you choose a company, ask if you’re eligible for discounts.
Having air bags, antilock brakes, or an antitheft device can reduce your rates. So can a clean driving record,carpooling, a car with low mileage, and good grades if you’re a student. Drivers between 50 and 65 also may qualify for discounts.

Step 9. Choose the highest deductible you can afford in order to pay the lowest premium possible.

Step 10. Once you decide on a policy,pay the entire premium up-front to save the monthly service fee.

Did you know An estimated 14 percent of drivers in the U.S. are uninsured ????