Written by John & May Harding - April 23, 2012 #2 for books on divorce on Amazon UK!!!
Amazon Five Stars!!!
"Unputdownable" wrote C. V. Devan Nair, former President of Singapore. Takes place in Singapore, Brunei, USA & London. Available from Amazon UK, Canada, China, France, Germany, and Japan.
Escape from Paradise
Free shipping worldwide!
Best option for Singapore!
Only here - 15 Free Dedicated IPs. Awesome for SEO. Our host for over ten years!
How to Open a Successful Pawnshop
Book by my former computer student, Mary Bancroft, the woman behind the plot to kill Hitler and who invited me to dinner with Woody Allen
On Friday, October 3, 2008 President Bush signed into law the $700 billion rescue plan. The day before, on Thursday, $430-billion had already been doled out!
We’ve heard of ex-post facto, but this is a new one – ex-pre facto, I guess you could call it.
Bush to the rescue
The bailout plan is Bush’s going away gift to Goldman Sachs and the rest of his buddies. It is the biggest robbery in the history of the – well, of the earth, I guess you could say.
Like eager children, Goldman Sachs, and the other Bush buddies just could not wait – they had to unwrap at least part of their gift one day early.
Neel Kashkari
Neel Kashkari (rhymes with “cash ‘n carry”), a 35 year old from Goldman Sachs (natch), was appointed by Goldman-Sachs-man Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to head of the Office of Financial Stability. Neel will be the guy to pass out the dough. He got an early start, with the $430-billion already passed out.
"Where some people are very wealthy and others have nothing, the result will be either extreme democracy or absolute oligarchy, or despotism will come from either of those excesses."
U.S. college debt, nearly $1 trillion, is larger than housing or credit card debt.
US healthcare worst, and most expensive.
Infections kill 100,000 patients in hospitals and other clinics in the U.S. every year.
Japan’s health-insurance system covers everybody, including illegal aliens. It pays for physical, mental, dental, and long-term care.
Japanese are the world’s most prodigious consumers of medical care; they see the doctor about 15 times per year, three times the U.S. norm. They get twice as many prescriptions per capita and three times as many MRI scans. The average hospital stay is 20 nights—four times the U.S. average.
Cost: And yet Japan produces all that high-quality care at bargain-basement prices. The aging nation spends about $3,500 per person on health care each year; America burns through $7,400 per person and still leaves millions without coverage.
Canadians live three years longer and are healthier than Americans, and the lack of universal health care in the United States may be a factor, researchers say.
After the Singapore Temasek debacle, Goodyear's "being considered as the next head of British Petroleum" didn't materialize. Goodyear sightings are becoming like Elvis sightings.
Recent Comments