“Citizen’s Media Integrity Board” – A good idea?

A Huffington Post commentor posted the following recommendation in response to an article regarding the possible opportunities for criminal action against Rush Limbaugh for election tampering.  Althoughthe post is very senstational I actually agree with most if not all of this idea:

“Election tampering Laws will only be enforced if it helps disenfranchise minority voters.

ABOLISH this government! Patriots Day April 19th, Philadelphia Independence Hall 9am:
State and Territorial Governors will assume authority over all Federal Agencies pending Ratification and Amendments to the Constitution including but not limited to: Ban on ALL forms of Torture, Publicly funded elections only, Mandated media contributions of equal time for all qualified campaigns, Ban on any form of Bribery of any nature to all public servants, Establishment of Citizen Media Integrity Board with Mandate to ban Campaigns from media for false or misleading adds and revoke broadcasting licenses from any broadcaster misusing the public airways and cable networks for false or misleading commentary or propaganda.

The seat of Authority in our Nation was forcibly removed from the hands of Tyrants and secured By The People For The People. And it Shall Not Perish From This Earth.”

Castleton’s McLamb charged with Tax Conspiracy

Breaking news on the Castleton Saga.  Let’s just hope he outs Suzanne Clifton.  I’m sure she’d love to have this completely covered by her scapegoat.  Maybe she didn’t do anything that qualifies as “illegal”?  There’s only two ways to look at her actions and if they were not malicious then she’s grossly incompetent and should be removed from every single business organization she’s involved with.

http://www.wral.com/news/local/story/2814409/

The more I think about this I want more answers.   What motive would Jay McLamb have for not paying the payroll taxes to the Feds if the money was kept “by the company” as the N&O reports?  Incentive had to come from somewhere.  Suzanne Clifton is the “sole shareholder” so it’s not like Jay was boosting his share value and he probably wasn’t out writing company checks for personal purchases.    And I doubt we will learn that he just liked living on the edge by cheating the Feds as a work related hobby.  There had to be a kick back for him to perform this fraud.  The incentive could have only come from one place.  I would imagine the words were something to the effect of “fix the revenue so my company won’t go under or your don’t have a job”.  But that’s just intuitive speculation.  Personally I hope he cuts a deal and rolls on this bitch.

Bank of America’s new overdraft policy as of 03-01-2008.

First, I should elaborate that I have not been hit with this.  I was informed of it by a supporter of House Resolution 946: The Consumer Overdraft Protection Fair Practices Act.

Apparently Bank of America is one of the first bank’s to implement a new process of charging overdraft fees to punish their customers yet again.  As of March 1, 2008 customers will no longer be charged a $35 overdraft fee when a transaction clears their account without available funds.  Now a “pending transaction” or one that has not posted to the account can automatically invoke the $35 fee if it puts the acount in the red.  So what’s this mean?  An example will explain it best:

Lets say you have $425.00 in your checking account.  You go to dinner with your significant other and spend $45 at Applebee’s or another affordable restaurant.   When the check comes you provide the waitstaff with you BOA debit card.  Through a complete accident the waiter types $450.00 into the keypad instead of $45.00 and receives an approval code. Prior to this new fee processing schedule by BOA this would be no major ordeal.  Many consumer have been told by cashiers “don’t worry that transaction won’t be settled and the hold will come off your account in 3-5 days” which it does.  And the waiter swipes the card again and enters a transaction for the correct amount $45.00 which Bank of America, by their own policy, approves even though the account is now “overdrawn”.

The next day you check your BOA account on line.  It’s negative (-$140.00).  Wait a minute.  What the ****?  You only spent $45.00.  Here’s how BOA’s systems now process transactions and fees:

Beginning Balance: $425

Accidental Pending: $450

Balance: (-$25.00)

Over the limit fee: (-35.00)

Pending: $45.00

Over the limit fee: (-35.00)

New Balance (-$140.00)

Eventually the accidental transaction of $450 will not be settled and it will drop off.  But instead of paying $45.00 for dinner you have spent $115.00 through no fault of your own (the original $45.00 plus the two $35.00 overdraft fees).  In an investigative converstation with a Bank of America Employee I was told these overdraft charges for pending transactions would not be refunded under any circumstances.

I can’t believe this is not getting more attention than it is.  This is the first time those who argue “don’t spend more than you have” and preach “personal financial responsibility” in defense of the banks have no ground to stand on.  This is stealing, plain and simple.  It is evidence that the banking industry has elevated itself above the laws and morals we claim to have founded this country on.   Now more than ever we need support for House Resolution 946 because once the other major banks conclude that BOA has punished their customers for profit, yet again, they will follow suit.

The media will not cover this topic because the major media outlets fear the loss of advertising dollars.   The banking industries crimes against consumers must be made known through viral propagation on the Internet.  Consumers must be given the option to remove their accounts from “overdraft protection” policies and the banks must be made to refund a percentage of those fees lawmakers consider excessive.

Move the Firefox 3 Home Button back to it’s original location.

After downloading Firefox 3 Beta 4 this drove me crazy for about 20 minutes and I could not find anything on-line that detailed how to get the home button back on the navigation toolbar.  I have no idea why the guys at Mozilla changed this.  As far as I’m concerned the Home button is part of routine navigation, not a bookmark.

  1. Make sure you have the Bookmarks toolbar open and the Home button is displayed.
  2. Right click on the Home button and select Customize.
  3. Drag the Home button to the Customize Toolbar dialog box.
  4. Now drag the Home button back up to the Navigation toolbar where you want it.

That is the illogical sequence required to get the Home button back to where it’s suppose to be.  It would be nice if we could just drag the button straight from one toolbar to another.  Other than this minor annoyance I’m relatively impressed with Beta 3.

No Country for Old Men Sucked.

There, I said it. It’s rare that I discuss anything as trivial as movies or entertainment but this movie deserves special recognition. Not because of how overwhelmingly good it was but instead what an absolute let down it ended up being. EVERYONE hyped this movie, even my best friend Daryl. So I was damned excited to see it. I liken this movie to interrupted sex. A complete let down. And before all the superior intellects start attacking with “you just didn’t get it” let me be straight with you: I got it. Once I started studying Euclidean geometry and reading Tolstoy I think I garnered the intellect to grasp good guys, bad guy, bad guy gets away. My problem with it was that it was BORING and not entertaining. I wasn’t even tired and I almost fell asleep.

I hated the time I spent watching this film so much that I Googled “No Country for Old Men sucks” this AM and found a thread on Rube Chat where a disagreement between contributors summed up the way I felt about it perfectly.

Old Country is a film that only the pretentious like…..because it allows them to tell those that dare to disagree, that they just don’t get it, or that they lack the intellect to wrap their minds around this movies supposed greatness. Answer me this…..what was the driving force of this film? The plot was thin, and there was really no point to all of the madness. DIE HARD is a simple formula done to perfection. There is a plot, a conflict, and a resolution. Much like the film that got robbed at the Oscars…..”Juno”.

Reply:

This is one of the most rediculous assertions I have ever heard on rube chat. There is so much to learn from this movie and for somone to just write it off like you are is so disappointing. The moral of this movie is so poignant that I am sad for people like you that just miss it, for some reason. It is unfortunate.

Oh no sir, a lot of us did not miss the “poignant moral” of this movie. Like I said before, I got it and I still thought the movie was boring as hell. Smokin’ Aces gets a better entertainment grade as far as I’m concerned. If you’re someone who was touched by this movie through a revelation that evil things happen and your powerless to stop them, you simply don’t get out of your own little comfort zone enough and face reality. Hell, just watch the news, or Die Hard.

Unsolved Triangle Murders

Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill are nationally known as the Triangle Area. The name references the Research Triangle Park that sits in the middle of these three cities. I’ve lived in the Triangle since I was 8 years old. My wife was born in Raleigh. We’ve seen a whole lot of 2 lane roads turn into 6 lane interchanges over the past 20 years. The growth has been explosive because of the nice neighborhoods, jobs and a relatively low crime rate with the exception of areas in Durham. Raleigh alone is now bigger than Minneapolis, St. Louis and Charlotte. If you add in all the surrounding suburbs the Triangle could be the national model for urban sprawl.

In the past few years the area has gotten some pretty negative national attention because of crime. There was, of course, the Duke rape scandal. Crystal Magnum and Mike Nifong be damned. But that case was sensational grandstanding by a politically motivated prosecutor. The more disturbing cases are the unsolved homicides that have occurred in the past two years. As of yesterday morning the list of unsolved murder victims includes the former Student Body President of UNC, Eve Carson. What a beautiful girl she was.

Of course we don’t have any details in the way this case is being handled by law enforcement. We just need to hope it’s managed better than other area homicides involving women have been. Such as the case of Michelle Young, a pregnant 29 year-old mother murdered in front of her 2 year-old daughter who was found crying beside the body in November of 2006. The Wake County Sheriffs Department focused a lot of attention on her husband Jason, who was “out of town on business” and called his sister several times to go get a fax from his house. She went and found her sisters body. Apparently the Sheriff hasn’t been able to bring a case against Jason Young. He’s roaming free, likely guilty of killing his wife.

And if that wasn’t disturbing enough there is the case of another pregnant mother Jenna Neilson, 22, who was delivering USA today newspapers when she was attacked and stabbed to death on June 14, 2007. her body was found behind a local convenience store. USA Today ran a national ad for information in the case. There was a composite of a person of interest circulated by the Raleigh Police Department. Most people thought the composite looked like a woman but it was labeled “Hispanic Male”. That’s it. That’s all they’ve got as far as the public knows.

Sure there have been other murders in the area as well as killers who’ve been caught. But having followed the details of local homicide cases closely I can tell you most were solved through dumb luck. They caught confessed serial killer Samual James Cooper after he robbed a bank, ran from the cops and hid inside a Domino’s Pizza. This apprehension was 5 previously unsolved homicides past due. The deaths of beautiful and pregnant women seem to be the most difficult for Triangle area law enforcement. They have no leads, can’t pin cases, solidify evidence or make arrests. In these cases the bad guys are winning.

I’m aware this is reality and not an episode of CSI but progress needs to be made. People are getting scared. The perception is quickly emerging that you can be gunned down, beaten or stabbed to death in a suburban neighborhood and there’s a high probability that the killer’s going to get away with it because the police can’t build a case. I’m not advocating a drag net that sweeps up innocent people to parade them in front of the media. I am asking for better police work. The investigating agencies should call in the Feds if they need help and combine the resources of multiple agencies. It’s time an arrest is made in one of these cases surrounding these murdered wives, mothers and daughters.

The hardest thing for me to digest when writing this article is, based on this track record, the parents of Eve Carson have no reason to believe there will be a killer arrested in the death of their daughter. Some random thug may have beaten the Chapel Hill law enforcement community. At this point every agency and officer involved in these homicides has their reputation on the line.

Time to go shopping.

Little PumpkinWe just realized this morning that Connor only has two or three long sleeve shirts and Logan’s only got about four long sleeve sleepers. Amy put him in his pumpkin costume this morning ecause nothing else was clean. I’m thinking we’ll go to the Mortex factory outlet but I’m not sure that’s the best place for baby stuff. Connor needs a sweat suit too.

I’m having a hard time getting Logan health insurance because of his size. For some reason the underwriter’s can’t comprehend a 27 lb. six month old and classify him as obese. Never mind he’s already 24 inches tall. The boy’s are healthier than I ever was.

Next up - NascarI think I’m going to try to find a riding lawn mower on Craigslist today. I haven’t decided if I’m gonna buy one, just gonna look for now. Aside from new jobs, all the recent birthday parties and laundry there’s not much going on at our house. And I didn’t win the lottery last night either. But don’t worry, that announcement’s coming some day.

Moses Cone Hospital and Extortion

Here’s an artical on the Blue Cross Blue Shieldof NC website about why Moses Cone cancelled their contracts with this major NC health insurance provider. 

http://www.bcbsnc.com/notices/073107-mosescone.cfm

This statement from BCBS underscores my fight to prove that it is NOT the health insurance companies who are responsible for outrageous medical costs, it is the hospital corporations.  I will pose the simple question once again, which no one has ever satisfactorily answered: How can hospital corporations, with a vested interest in shareholder profits, put their patients care above targeted revenues and profitability.  The simple answer no one wants to admit is: They can’t.

An annual double digit increase for inpatient fees based on identical procedures is an outrage.  This markup (ripoff) would not be tolerated in any other consumer industry.  Yet society at large is silent towards hospitals and blames health insurance companies.  If anything the insurance companies are working to control costs.