[Vtigercrm-aclgroup] Investigate your neighbor
ICM
ICM at kobancwre.info
Thu Aug 15 17:21:53 UTC 2013
Is your arrest record public?
http://www.kobancwre.info/1892/5/44/15/43.12tt74660319AAF15.php
No Thanks - http://www.kobancwre.info/1892/5/44/15/43.12tt74660319AAF9.html
federal benefits,
they asked for a complete list of those benefits. They also asked
for a list of benefits that would be denied during "probationary status."Further,
they asked for an estimate of the cost to taxpayers in the
10 years after illegal immigrants are granted green cards, as well as
for the 10 years after citizenship.Republican staffers on the Senate Budget
Committee estimated last week that the annual cost to taxpayers of legalizing
illegal immigrants could be in the billions.But Rubio spokesman Alex Conant
disputed the numbers, saying in a statement last week that it's simply
too early to provide cost estimates."Since we don't yet have a legislative
proposal, it's not possible to come up with anything resembling an accurate
calculation about the potential fiscal impact of bipartisan immigration
reform," he said.Conant added that Rubio is concerned about the "potential
fiscal impact" of the bill and will request an "in-depth" budget analysis.While
these applicants could eventually tap federal benefits, proponents of the
path to citizenship will argue that they could help bring revenue into
Washington by entering the workforce legally and paying taxes.
A drawing of ruling party candidate Nicolas Maduro with a bird on
his fist with an inflatable doll of the late Hugo Chavez in
the background is held up as supporters move to the site
of Maduro's closing campaign rally in Caracas, Venezuela, Thursday, April
11, 2013. Maduro, Chavez's hand-picked successor, assured last week during
a campaign rally that Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez's spirit appeared
to him in the form of a little bird that flew around
his head inside a wooden chapel to give him his blessing. He
is running for president against opposition candidate Henrique Capriles
in the presidential election set for Sunday, April 14. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)The
Associated PressVALENCIA, Venezuela It's just after nightfall and the power
is out again in untold hundreds of thousands probably millions
of Venezuelan homes. If the government knows how many,
it's not saying. It hasn't issued reports on problems in the public
power grid since 2010.In Venezuela's third-largest city, Pedro Martinez
dons a shirt for visitors drawn by the flicker of candles inside
his one-story, cement-block house in a middle-class district. The Caribbean
heat is sticky thick inside. A mesh hammock hangs by the front
door."This happens nearly every day," Martinez says of the blackout, holding
a candle close so a reporter can take notes. It's the day's
second outage. The first struck just after noon.It's been like this for
five years, pretty mu
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.vtigercrm.com/pipermail/vtigercrm-aclgroup/attachments/20130815/06bd3915/attachment.html>
More information about the vtigercrm-aclgroup
mailing list