Tag Archive | "plans"

GOOGLE’S Sinister DNA Plans


Courtesy JRense SUBSCRIBE! Google has their tentacles in every area of our lives. Whistle Blower Scientist Leuren Moret reveals Googles ongoing plans and technology advances , including advanced DNA mapping and profiling the general population as we hurdle toward a total cradle to grave post Orwellian nightmare world of total police state control.

The late Carl Sagan said (which is related to this documentary) “We’ve arranged a global civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology. We’ve also arranged things so that almost no one understands science or technology. We might get away with it for a while, but sooner or later, this combustible mixture of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces”. This documentary film poses the question: Are we making Holes in Heaven? HAARP (High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program) is a controversial high frequency radio transmitter, or “ionospheric heater,” which is believed to be descended from the works of Nikola Tesla and is operated by the US Navy/Air Force and Phillip Laboratories in remote Gakona, Alaska. Using HAARP, the military can focus a billion-watt pulsed radio beam into our upper atmosphere, ostensibly for ionospheric research. This procedure will form extremely low frequency waves and send them back to the Earth, enhancing communications with submarines and allowing us to “see” into the Earth, detecting anything from oil reserves to underground missile silos. However, several researchers claim HAARP poses many dangers, including blowing thirty-mile holes in the Earth’s upper atmosphere. They also warn of possible disruption of the subtle magnetic energies of our Earth and ourselves. Holes in Heaven? is a prime example of grassroots filmmaking by producer Paula Randol-Smith and Emmy-winning director Wendy
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Advances in Global High-Technology Management (Advances
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Cheapest Airline Tickets of My Travel Plans


Cheapest Airline Tickets of My Travel Plans

I am looking for the cheapest airline tickets first when I start this part of my travel plans. That does not always mean that I buy the cheapest airline tickets that I find. Not at all! As I have pointing out in other topics the other factors associated with airline flights may end up being more important to my for this particular flight than just the cost of the flight. If the cheapest airline tickets I find turn out to meet all my other requirements then they are the ones that I buy and I have fulfilled my goal of finding the best deals available.

An international airline ticket has some special concerns especially since 9/11. The way the individual airline handles the passport and other port of entry requirements may be the deciding factors in your choice as to which airline you want to use.

Many of these factors you will only know if you have flown the airline before. You may want to ask other people you know about their experiences with the airline you a re considering before making your finial choice.

An international airline ticket can be very expensive but can also be the best deal in the airline market. TravelZoo.com is an excellent web site to keep in mind for the cheapest airline tickets and travel deals in general. They offer a FREE Subscription to the Top 20® travel deals and this is a worthy place to check.

Compare airfares with SideStep, the traveler’s search engine, and check out flight deals from over 150 travel sites and 600 airlines with one click. Find cheap airfares, discount hotels, cruise vacations, car rentals, and vacation packages to popular travel destinations worldwide. Also, check out our interactive travel guides for suggestions on travel information.

Sometimes I want to fly first class and then the search for the cheapest airline tickets can mean some real money! I have found the biggest disparity between airline ticket prices when flying first class. Airlines sometimes change prices for the same trip several times each day. In particular if you’re buying your ticket straightforwardly from the carrier, ask if the declared airfare is the least expensive.

When you decide to use the Internet to compare prices for the cheapest airline tickets, compare ticket prices on many web sites to make sure you are actually getting the cheapest airfare. Compare airfares with SideStep, the traveler’s search engine, and check out flight deals from over 150 travel sites and 600 airlines with one click. Find cheap airfares, discount hotels, cruise vacations, car rentals, and vacation packages to popular travel destinations worldwide. Also, check out our interactive travel guides for suggestions on travel information.

Usually, we find that the longer the flight, the bigger the savings. This is generally true but not always. So, take your time and compare prices. An international airline ticket can be very expensive but can also be the best deal in the airline market. TravelZoo.com is an excellent web site to keep in mind for the cheapest airline tickets and travel deals in general. They offer a FREE Subscription to the Top 20 travel deals and this is a worthy place to check.

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Travelzoo, the most trusted publisher of travel and entertainment deals, recently released a number of fresh travel deals just in time for fall! Watch this video to hear these deals then visit www.travelzoo.com to learn more.
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Kids health care plans on hold in Missouri


Kids health care plans on hold in Missouri

It’s known as “Express Lane Eligibility” — an effort to put children on the fast track for government-run health care coverage.

But in Missouri, the Express Lane has become the slow lane.       Documents obtained by The Associated Press show the Missouri Department of Social Services recommended the adoption this spring of a half-dozen measures intended to enroll more children in government health care programs for low- and middle-income families.

With winter now approaching, none of those recommendations has been implemented.

“It takes money to do it,” Gov. Jay Nixon explained last week. “With the downturn in the economy, we just have not had the resources to expand that area.”

The expansion of health coverage was one of Nixon’s chief campaign pledges last year. It will remain unfulfilled as he ends his first year as governor.

The Republican-led Legislature rejected the Democratic governor’s proposals earlier this year to add more low-income adults to Medicaid and to expand the Children’s Health Insurance Program by eliminating or lowering the premiums charged to families.

But when President Barack Obama signed legislation in early February giving states new ways to more easily enroll children in government health care programs, Nixon’s administration quickly began working behind the scenes to take advantage of its provisions.

Within weeks, a top official in the Family Services Division of Missouri’s social services agency had identified Express Lane Eligibility as “our best bet for rapidly increasing enrollment” in Missouri’s health care programs, according to documents provided last week to the AP in response to an October open-records request.

Express Lane Eligibility allows states to assume that children already enrolled in other federal aid programs such as food stamps or child care also are eligible to receive health coverage under Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program.

A March 26 department memo identified the sped-up eligibility effort as one of a half dozen options — labeled “Recommendation: PROCEED” — to increase enrollment in Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program. To do everything would have cost the state more than million. The result would have been nearly 42,000 additional people — mainly children — covered by Missouri’s health care programs.

On Feb. 26 and again on April 16, Department of Social Services officials met with children’s health care advocates to discuss options for expanding enrollment in health care programs. Following the second meeting, department director Ron Levy sent a memo to Nixon’s staff indicating a strong consensus to “move forward on the express lane eligibility.”

By the end of April, department staff had begun running computer tests to identify children enrolled in other aid programs who could be eligible for Medicaid. They also had developed a form letter to be mailed to thousands of parents.

But the enrollment letters never were sent.

Around that time, Missouri’s tax revenues took a sharp turn for the worse. Nixon began the new fiscal year July 1 by announcing 0 million of budget vetoes and spending cuts.

Nonetheless, advocacy groups turned up the pressure on Nixon. They sent a letter signed by more than 50 individuals and groups urging him to direct the Department of Social Services to implement five specific steps to insure more children.

The timing couldn’t have been worse.

The mid-July advocacy letter arrived the same week that the Department of Social Services warned Nixon’s budget office that the Medicaid program likely would need an additional million in state funds to avoid a shortfall during the 2010 fiscal year. One main reason: an expected enrollment increase of 37,000 children due to the poor economy. The department said there likely was some overlap between the newly enrolled children and those who would have been reached by the Express Lane Eligibility program.

But that hasn’t made it easier for Nixon’s administration to explain to advocates why it hasn’t been able to follow through on Nixon’s promise to expand health coverage for children.

“We’re getting the crap beat out of us for not moving forward now on express lane enrollment … which we need to do!” department director Levy wrote to his Medicaid division director, Ian McCaslin, on July 30.

Department spokesman Scott Rowson said Friday that the agency still wants to implement Express Lane Eligibility and other efforts to enroll more children in government health coverage. But he acknowledged: “It’s probably not likely in the 2010 fiscal year,” which runs through June 30.

Nixon also said he still supports efforts to expand government health coverage for children and the working poor. The governor said he’s watching what becomes of the health care debate in Washington and monitoring the state’s bank accounts.

“If we get an uptick and we have the resources to do it, you can rest well assured we’ll be prepared to do it,” Nixon said.

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101 Kid Summer Activities
Discover How to Make Magical Moments This Summer With Your Kids!
101 Kid Summer Activities

See Pharma funds behind Mental “screening” www.signsofsuicide.org and visit www.cchrint.org – Mental health screening is a tool of the psycho industry used as a feeder line to get more kids and adults on drugs. Depression Screening Day was created by Signs Of Suicide, a group receiving millions in Pharma funding. Click on link above for the documents. Find out more: www.cchr.org http www.teenscreentruth.com

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Kids health care plans on hold in Missouri


Kids health care plans on hold in Missouri

It’s known as “Express Lane Eligibility” — an effort to put children on the fast track for government-run health care coverage.

But in Missouri, the Express Lane has become the slow lane.

Documents obtained by The Associated Press show the Missouri Department of Social Services recommended the adoption this spring of a half-dozen measures intended to enroll more children in government health care programs for low- and middle-income families.

With winter now approaching, none of those recommendations has been implemented.

“It takes money to do it,” Gov. Jay Nixon explained last week. “With the downturn in the economy, we just have not had the resources to expand that area.”

The expansion of health coverage was one of Nixon’s chief campaign pledges last year. It will remain unfulfilled as he ends his first year as governor.

The Republican-led Legislature rejected the Democratic governor’s proposals earlier this year to add more low-income adults to Medicaid and to expand the Children’s Health Insurance Program by eliminating or lowering the premiums charged to families.

But when President Barack Obama signed legislation in early February giving states new ways to more easily enroll children in government health care programs, Nixon’s administration quickly began working behind the scenes to take advantage of its provisions.

Within weeks, a top official in the Family Services Division of Missouri’s social services agency had identified Express Lane Eligibility as “our best bet for rapidly increasing enrollment” in Missouri’s health care programs, according to documents provided last week to the AP in response to an October open-records request.

Express Lane Eligibility allows states to assume that children already enrolled in other federal aid programs such as food stamps or child care also are eligible to receive health coverage under Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program.

A March 26 department memo identified the sped-up eligibility effort as one of a half dozen options — labeled “Recommendation: PROCEED” — to increase enrollment in Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program. To do everything would have cost the state more than million. The result would have been nearly 42,000 additional people — mainly children — covered by Missouri’s health care programs.

On Feb. 26 and again on April 16, Department of Social Services officials met with children’s health care advocates to discuss options for expanding enrollment in health care programs. Following the second meeting, department director Ron Levy sent a memo to Nixon’s staff indicating a strong consensus to “move forward on the express lane eligibility.”

By the end of April, department staff had begun running computer tests to identify children enrolled in other aid programs who could be eligible for Medicaid. They also had developed a form letter to be mailed to thousands of parents.

But the enrollment letters never were sent.

Around that time, Missouri’s tax revenues took a sharp turn for the worse. Nixon began the new fiscal year July 1 by announcing 0 million of budget vetoes and spending cuts.

Nonetheless, advocacy groups turned up the pressure on Nixon. They sent a letter signed by more than 50 individuals and groups urging him to direct the Department of Social Services to implement five specific steps to insure more children.

The timing couldn’t have been worse.

The mid-July advocacy letter arrived the same week that the Department of Social Services warned Nixon’s budget office that the Medicaid program likely would need an additional million in state funds to avoid a shortfall during the 2010 fiscal year. One main reason: an expected enrollment increase of 37,000 children due to the poor economy. The department said there likely was some overlap between the newly enrolled children and those who would have been reached by the Express Lane Eligibility program.

But that hasn’t made it easier for Nixon’s administration to explain to advocates why it hasn’t been able to follow through on Nixon’s promise to expand health coverage for children.

“We’re getting the crap beat out of us for not moving forward now on express lane enrollment … which we need to do!” department director Levy wrote to his Medicaid division director, Ian McCaslin, on July 30.

Department spokesman Scott Rowson said Friday that the agency still wants to implement Express Lane Eligibility and other efforts to enroll more children in government health coverage. But he acknowledged: “It’s probably not likely in the 2010 fiscal year,” which runs through June 30.

Nixon also said he still supports efforts to expand government health coverage for children and the working poor. The governor said he’s watching what becomes of the health care debate in Washington and monitoring the state’s bank accounts.

“If we get an uptick and we have the resources to do it, you can rest well assured we’ll be prepared to do it,” Nixon said.

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Missouri Health Insurance
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Little Kid Crafts For All Seasons
Discover Quick and Easy Crafts Guaranteed To Spark Your Child’s Imagination and Thirst for Learning and Create Lots of Family Fun!
Little Kid Crafts For All Seasons

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