Saturday, March 2, 2013

Obama chides GOP for killing plan to address cuts

(AP) ? President Barack Obama is chiding Senate Republicans for blocking a Democratic plan to replace automatic spending cuts that are set to kick in Friday.

Senate Republicans objected to $55 billion worth of new taxes in the Democratic plan. It would have replaced the cuts with tax increases on millionaires and spending reductions over 10 years.

Obama says Republicans chose to cut services for kids, older people and the military rather than close loopholes for the rich. He says Republicans want the middle class alone to pay for deficit reduction.

Republicans floated their own plan to give Obama more flexibility to find $85 billion in spending cuts this year. Democrats and tea party Republicans killed that plan Thursday.

Obama and congressional leaders are to meet Friday to discuss potential ways ahead.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-02-28-US-Budget-Battle-Obama/id-a9851a6ac68945dfb4d9e5bbc0df643d

yom hashoah yolo liquidmetal gsa scandal kelis dick clark dies ibogaine

Colorado task force ponders how to tax legal pot

DENVER (AP) ? Pot smokers in Colorado were the biggest winners in the vote that legalized the drug. Now state regulators are working out the details of exactly how to tax it, so the benefits are shared statewide in the form of increased revenue.

A state panel meets Thursday to draft final recommendations based on the voter-approved marijuana legalization question that asked for excise taxes up to 15 percent to fund school construction.

Colorado lawmakers could set a lower tax, or they could add sales taxes beyond the current statewide 2.9 percent. Legislators could even create a special new "marijuana tax" for consumers, plus a series of required licensing fees for growers and sellers. Besides schools, the taxes must fund marijuana safety enforcement and drug education measures.

Any option would have to go back to voters for final approval.

Marijuana proponents and critics agree that taxes should be hefty. But if levies are too high, legal pot could be so expensive that people continue buying it underground.

"If this doesn't work and taxes are so high the black market still dominates, then what was the point?" asked Mike Elliott of Colorado's Medical Marijuana Industry Group.

Fiscal analysts have no idea where to begin predicting how much tax pot smokers could produce. The unknowns include how many people are buying pot now and what they're paying, how many people will start smoking marijuana now that it's legal and whether prices will drop once commercial sales begin. If the federal government blocks commercial pot sales, the marijuana tax windfall would be zero.

"It's a big question mark," said Colorado state budget analyst Dan Krug, who ran through multiple tax scenarios with the marijuana task force set up to recommend legislation to regulate weed. Krug's estimates ranged from a few million dollars a year up to $72 million annually, depending on tax rates and growth of the industry.

In Washington, the only other state to legalize marijuana for recreational use, the tax picture is clearer.

Voters there set 25 percent taxes at each of three different stages ? from growers to processors to consumers. The measure also defined exact spending levels on things like education. For example, Washington will spend exactly $20,000 on Web-based education on the health and safety risks of marijuana.

Colorado's task force is likely to adopt a vague recommendation asking state lawmakers to set excise fees and add licensing fees steep enough to cover the costs of regulation. They'll leave it lawmakers to figure out those exact costs.

Task force members will also settle recommendations Thursday on regulations unrelated to taxes, including rules for growing marijuana at home.

The task force already has asked for potency labels, limited marijuana advertising, set residency requirements for marijuana workers and limited commercial sales to less than an ounce. The group decided against a residency requirement for pot customers, opening the door for marijuana tourism.

___

Kristen Wyatt is on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/APkristenwyatt

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/colorado-task-force-ponders-tax-legal-pot-162809695.html

playstation all stars battle royale kim zolciak kim zolciak travis pastrana quinton coples a.j. jenkins riley reiff

Saturday, February 9, 2013

RSS Feed Search Engine - Real-Time Search Powered by FeedRank

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.rssmicro.com/rss.web?q=College

monkees songs rail gun harrisburg top chef texas great pacific garbage patch ben affleck and jennifer garner google privacy changes

Prisoner hides cell phone in butt


By EMS1 Staff

SRI LANKA ? A 58-year-old Sri Lankan convict who was trying to hide a cell phone during a search was caught when the device started ringing.

The prisoner, 58, was admitted to the hospital where doctors removed the phone and an accompanying handset from his rectum.

"Unfortunately for him, the phone rang at the wrong time and guards knew he had a phone at the wrong end," a hospital official told Agence French Presse.

The man was hospitalized for two days, discharged and sent back to prison.

Source: http://www.ems1.com/ems-oddities/articles/1403135-Prisoner-hides-cell-phone-in-butt/

sacramento kings alex jones the bachelor Google Docs Huell Howser Justin Bieber Smoking Weed Katherine Webb

Winter Storm, First Dusting of Snow Has Arrived in Connecticut

Yahoo! News is gathering brief first-person accounts, photos and video from the severe winter weather in the northeastern United States. Here's one resident's story.

FIRST PERSON | Winter Storm Nemo, also known as Blizzard Charlotte, has officially made its way to central Connecticut.

Here in Norwich, the snow began falling at around 8 a.m., and we've accumulated about a quarter-inch in the first half hour. Snow is also falling in southern New London County; the Groton naval submarine base has not officially closed yet.

Its last update from yesterday evening was that it was closing the base at noon to non-essential personnel. Trucks are already plowing and salting the roads in preparation for heavier snowfall tonight and driving conditions are still safe as long as you exercise extreme caution. All of Connecticut should prepare to stay indoors through the weekend.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/winter-storm-first-dusting-snow-arrived-connecticut-174400188.html

la riots new jersey devils torn acl derrick rose injury st louis news utah jazz lawrence of arabia

Daryl, Merle prepare to fight on 'Walking Dead'

By Anna Chan, TODAY

"Kill him!" "Kill them!" Boy howdy, those folks in Woodbury on "The Walking Dead" sure were bloodthirsty when The Governor offered up "terrorist" Daryl Dixon and "traitor" Merle Dixon for a fight to the death.

The mid-season finale left off with the two stunned siblings facing each other, and judging from four behind-the-scenes photos that AMC is sharing exclusively with The Clicker, it appears that when the show makes its highly anticipated return Sunday night, the fight to the death will commence.

Now, we know the folks in Woodbury want to see some blood, but let's hope they make it at least a somewhat fair fight and cut those ropes around Daryl's (Norman Reedus) wrists!?

Tina Rowden / AMC

Norman Reedus (Daryl) and Michael Rooker (Merle) on the set of "Walking Dead."

Another photo shows that Merle (Michael Rooker) perhaps sustains a minor injury to his umm ... shorter arm. During the fight? After? Against someone who isn't his little brother? Who knows? (What we do know is that Rooker believes the siblings are survivors and will find a way out of the mess together.)

Gene Page / AMC

Michael Rooker on the set of "The Walking Dead."

As a "Walking Dead" trailer has already shown, at the very least, Daryl will survive the sticky predicament. One of the photos AMC shared with us reveals that he escapes the situation relatively unharmed. According to the trailer, the crossbow-wielding hero races back to the prison to warn Rick's gang of The Gov's (David Morrisey) impending attack, but we hope Daryl takes a minute to sing to his "lil' ass kicker" afterward.

Gene Page / AMC

Daryl with his trusty crossbow.

It appears that at some point in the episode, Rick (Andrew Lincoln) and Maggie (Lauren Cohan) head back to Woodbury. (Why, Maggie?! The gang just helped you and your beloved Glenn escape in the mid-season finale!) Check out this photo of the sheriff and the farmer's daughter. That makeshift barricade behind them -- and the truck -- look awfully familiar, don't they? (Check out the photo of Merle above.) Wonder what they're up to ...

Gene Page / AMC

The crew of "Walking Dead" film a scene featuring Andrew Lincoln and Lauren Cohan.

"The Walking Dead" kicks off the second half of season three on Sunday at 9 p.m. on AMC.

How do you predict Daryl and Merle will get out of their situation? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page!

Related content:

More in The Clicker:

Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2013/02/07/16886454-exclusive-walking-dead-photos-daryl-and-merle-prepare-to-fight-to-the-death?lite

halftime super bowl 2012 super bowl score madonna super bowl performance madonna half time m.i.a super bowl coin toss best superbowl commercials

Op-Ed: Atheist 'church' does not make atheism religious

London
-
Two British comedians have started a "church" for atheists in the UK. Some say it is the start of an atheist religion, others just think it is a "congregation of unreligious people."
UK comedians Sanderson Jones and Pippa Evans have started holding atheist gatherings on Sundays in an old abandoned church in North London. Their gatherings feature secular rock music, lectures on science, discussions about mortality, and even some comedy.


Critics of this idea, including many atheists, have claimed that Jones and Evans are trying to turn atheism into a religion by having these gatherings.


However, since when does religion have a monopoly on gathering? It is a natural drive to seek those who share common ideas and beliefs and to gather together to discuss them.


Blogger Adam Lee discusses this very topic in his blog, "Why Do Atheists Gather?" He wrote the article after the Reason Rally in March 2012, of which many people considered such an event as "sink[ing] to the level of the religious."


Lee points out that it takes more than just a group of people gathering in one place to be considered a religion.


If that was all that was required, every stadium and sports arena would become a holy place each weekend. And that's not even mentioning the political rallies, parades, conventions and marches that take place around the world. (Does the St. Patrick's Day Parade make "Irishness" a religion? I won't even ask about the Star Trek or Harry Potter-themed conventions.) Lee also points out that religion "requires a creed, official dogmas or texts, an ecclesiastical hierarchy, an insistence on ideological conformity, even just a bare belief in the supernatural - none of which we have." Atheism has also been shunned by most Americans, and atheists are mistrusted more than any other group of people, according to a study by the University of Minnesota. Gathering allows atheists to find other atheists and feel a sense of inclusion in a predominantly religious American society. Gathering atheists also show a political strength, according to Lee. It's all well and good for ivory-tower dwellers to proclaim that we should just calmly debate theology in a dispassionate realm of ideas, but there's a real world outside their windows, a world where laws inspired by religion - laws that define the contours of free speech, laws restricting access to abortion or birth control, laws governing the equal protection of gay people, laws dictating what's taught in public schools, laws that allow publicly funded charities to discriminate on the basis of religion - have real impacts on the lives of millions of people. Are Sanderson and Evans blurring the line between atheism and religion by holding these gatherings? No. They are simply providing an outlet for those that are not religious to meet new people who share their ideas and beliefs, learn things about our universe, discuss philosophy, laugh and have fun.

Source: http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/343028

get back on board rob lowe peyton manning what is sopa marianne gingrich ibooks author gabrielle union mark wahlberg