Thursday, February 23, 2012

Your Estate Planning Portfolio | Dickinson Investment Advisors

What are the most critical pieces of personal information for you to compile and organize???For our client event on February 7 and 9, Jennifer Carlson, an estate planning attorney in Council Bluffs, presented as our guest speaker.

One of the most caring things you can do for your loved ones is to prepare a portfolio of your important documents. ?This is an often overlooked part of estate planning. ?Portfolio preparation consists of organizing all of your important documents in one location with user names, passwords, and verification information.

At the time of one?s passing, family members are grieving, and it is often difficult for them?to identify the assets you own, locate passwords/keys, and retrieve necessary documents.??Because none of us knows when our portfolio will be needed, compiling your portfolio information is a task that cannot ?wait until later.?

While each person?s portfolio will be different, following is a list that covers the most common documents.? This list can prompt you to consider additional items that need to be part of your personal portfolio as well.

Personal Data:

  • Marriage license
  • Divorce/Separation documents
  • Social Security information
  • Military service information
  • Tax returns (including tax information to prepare current tax return)
  • List of advisors
  • Safety deposit box information
  • Prepaid funeral arrangements/Cemetery plot documents
  • User names, passwords, verification questions

Assets:

  • Real estate deeds
  • Vehicle/Motor home titles
  • Stocks, bonds, investments
  • Cyber assets (web page, domain name, blog)
  • LLC, partnership, corporate documents
  • Installment contract, promissory notes
  • Bank and/or credit union accounts
  • College savings plans
  • Life insurance policies
  • 401(k) and?similar accounts
  • Individual retirement accounts
  • Pension documents
  • Annuity contracts
  • Job-related benefits
  • Fraternal benefits

Estate Planning Documents:

  • Will
  • Trusts
  • Letter of instructions

Medical:

  • Medical history
  • Health insurance information
  • Long-term care insurance policy
  • Medical power of attorney
  • Living will/Do Not Resuscitate order

Financial Power of Attorney:

You may choose to keep hard copies organized in files, or you can make use of a virtual vault such as is provided through ?eMoney.?? Available through Dickinson Investment Advisors, ?eMoney? is a secure online system for you to be able to view, organize, monitor, and store the combining of all your financial information in one place.

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[Note:? Jennifer A. Carlson is an attorney with Stuart Tinley Law Firm LLP in Council Bluffs.? She practices primarily in estate planning, probate, wills, and trusts, and can be reached at 712-322-4033.? Stuart Tinley Law Firm LLP and its predecessor partnerships have been practicing in Council Bluffs for 150 years.? The firm is a full
service multidisciplinary law office serving the Council Bluffs/Omaha metro area, southwest Iowa, regional, and national clients.]

Source: http://www.dickinsoninvestments.com/your-estate-planning-portfolio/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=your-estate-planning-portfolio

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Monday, February 20, 2012

Companies working to increase collaboration in teleconferencing ...

As video conferencing and telepresence developed in various parts of the world through different companies over the past handful of years, enterprises and individuals alike discovered a market of distinct services that offer high function at high costs. Whether the conferencing solution was developed internally, as in some high-power businesses and enterprises, or adopted from existing services such as Cisco?s, Polycom?s, or Microsoft?s, it quickly became apparent that there was no universal form of video conferencing technology in place. As a result, connecting remote parties who use different services can be a real hassle. Generally, collaboration either does not function at all or only works on a low quality, voice-only connection. But some people are working to change that.?Multisource?recently reported on XConnect, a company dedicated to making high-quality remote collaboration between video conferencing technology a reality.

The article explains:

?XConnect is a company dedicated to driving the widespread use of these 21st century services across all networks and at affordable pricing. To achieve this, it has established Peering Hubs to ensure that lavish services run between independent network operators. Just as SMS took off globally because it worked seamlessly between South African and global mobile operators, so innovational, unified communications will become ubiquitous if they work seamlessly across all networks. Both in the fixed and mobile telephone worlds, global industry standards bodies have recognised this need and have created the industry standards on which XConnect?s deployments are based.?

One of the primary concerns with current video conferencing standards is the lack of availability of high-quality products at a decent price. Most of these services are reserved for enterprises that have a substantial amount of their budget devoted to communications technology and can afford to invest in premium services. The disparity between the quality of these higher-end services and the telecommunications used by the average consumer is a gap that must be bridged.

The inclusion of independent network operators could be only the first step of many in creating a sophisticated link between major video conferencing service providers, but XConnect is moving in the right direction. The drive to discover a powerful global communication system should push this project forward in the coming years.

?

Source: http://www.whygo.net/wordpress/companiescollaborationteleconferencing/business-video-conferencing/02/19/2012/

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Friday, February 17, 2012

Air guns give us a shot at sizing up quake faults

Teasing out just what is happening below the Earth's shifty surface during an earthquake is no simple feat, but scientists have found a new tool that may help get a clearer picture of the minute movements of seismic faults.

Air guns shot at a lake can help illuminate how faults and other subterranean structures near a lake can subtly deform over time, a group of researchers in China has found using a new seismic station they've developed.

Traditional seismic stations monitor ground motion passively. This new method is a more active one that employs air guns that shoot acoustic waves that can help seismic instruments get a clearer picture of the Earth's interior, acting somewhat like a strobe light in the dark.

The new station, called the Binchuan Transmitting Seismic Station, was deployed in April 2011 at the northern section of Red River Fault in Binchuan, located in China's Yunnan province, where it intersects another major fault, the Chenghai Fault. The region is home to more than 3 million people and faces great seismic hazards, prone as it is to earthquakes exceeding magnitude 7.

The air gun was immersed in Lake Dayindian, a 494-acre (2 square kilometers) reservoir.

The ground-shaking induced by each one of the air gun shots is estimated to be equivalent to that of a magnitude-0.5 earthquake. Nevertheless, the air pulses appear environmentally friendly, and do not seem to have any visible effects on fish in the lake or nearby buildings, dams or power lines.

The station works in concert with an array of permanent and portable seismic stations that spans an area of 3,860 square miles (10,000 sq km).

Preliminary results with 111 test shots fired over six nights suggest the station "provides an unprecedented opportunity to monitor the subsurface changes of the fault zone," said researcher Baoshan Wang at the China Earthquake Administration's Institute of Geophysics in Beijing.

It should help monitor the evolution of the crust beneath an approximately 300-mile-long (500 km) section of the Red River Fault, as well as other faults nearby.

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The researchers now propose firing the array once every week for at least the next three years to continuously monitor deformation of these faults. It could also help analyze other seismological problems, such as how seismic waves propagate in complex areas of the Earth's crust.

"The next step is we are trying to develop a similar system that is more portable, which will help us to monitor the subsurface at any place we want," Wang said.

The scientists detailed their findings in the Jan. 31 issue of the journal Eos.

? 2012 OurAmazingPlanet. All rights reserved. More from OurAmazingPlanet.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/46398859/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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UK competition agency threatens inquiry into banks (AP)

LONDON ? Britain's big banks could face a full-blown monopoly investigation if they drag their heels on opening up to competition, a national regulator warned Thursday.

Banks must act to make it easier for customers to understand various charges and to switch to other banks if they choose, said John Fingleton, head of the Office of Fair Trading.

If the situation doesn't improve, Fingleton said, his agency could refer the banking industry for an investigation by the Competition Commission. That agency has the power to force a break up of private companies, as it has done in ordering BAA Ltd. to sell Gatwick, Stansted and Edinburgh airports.

"A step change is needed in the banking sector," Singleton said in a speech to a seminar organized by market intelligence company MLex and Lloyds Banking Group.

"Going forward we need to see evidence which demonstrates that the market dynamics of entry and switching are sufficient to drive stronger customer-focused competition. Without this the obvious question is whether the concentrated market structure of UK banking is the problem.

"And one way to consider this question is a reference to the Competition Commission."

Fingleton suggested that a possible referral could come after his agency's review of the personal current account market which is to begin later this year.

The British Bankers Association said research shows that "the vast majority of customers are satisfied with the service their bank provides and there is no reason for them to switch accounts.

"Similarly, there is no evidence that customers want to move away from the current 'fee free if in credit' model to one where every customer pays for every transaction, as is the case in virtually every other country," said BBA spokesman Brian Capon.

Shares fell in the banking sector as Moody's Investors Service announced that three British giants ? Barclays, HSBC and part-nationalized Royal Band of Scotland ? remained under review for a possible downgrades of their credit ratings. HSBC and RBS were both down more than 1 percent by early afternoon.

Banks already face a major restructuring, as the government announced in December it would legislate to require banks to isolate their unglamorous retail operations from their more volatile investment banking activity. Treasury chief George Osborne says that legislation is aimed as solving the problem of banks being "too big to fail."

Fingleton pointed to the part-nationalized Lloyds Banking Group as an example of how the fallout from the credit crisis had led to less competition.

Lloyds' takeover of Halifax/Bank of Scotland, rescuing it from collapse, had eliminated HBOS as a major competitor in the personal current account market, he said.

"The Lloyds-HBOS merger increased concentration in an already highly concentrated and non-dynamic market, he said.

Beyond making it easier for customers to switch banks, Fingleton said banks should make it easier for customers to understand the true costs of their accounts.

A study by his agency "found that consumers paid little attention to unarranged overdraft charges and forgone interest" which make up the vast bulk of banks' revenues, Fingleton said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/britain/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120216/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_britain_banks

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Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Redo-U: Money Saving Tips - personal finance, bank, money, credit ...

Generation Equity TV features personal finance videos educating people about money, bank accounts, mortgages, credit cards, credit scores, and more. Our site features selected educational and entertaining videos from different sources to help you make the best decision about your money.

Source: http://www.generationequity.tv/home/2012/2/7/redo-u-money-saving-tips.html

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Oren Moverman on Rampart and Directing Woody Harrelson


Director Oren Moverman worked as a screenwriter before making his feature debut with 2009's The Messenger, a moving, well-received war drama that garnered Oscar nominations both for his screenplay and supporting actor Woody Harrelson. This week, Moverman reunites with Harrelson for Rampart, in which the actor plays an unstable Los Angeles cop whose life unravels after he's caught on tape beating a suspect. Playing deliberately with audience expectations of the genre, Moverman and Harrelson (working from an original draft by James Ellroy) craft a character piece that begins as a crime drama and gradually dismantles the reality of its world as the paranoia escalates. We sat down with the director recently to talk about the film and his collaboration with Harrelson.


What drew you to this as your next project after The Messenger?

Oren Moverman: Well I was basically brought in to work on a James Ellroy first draft of Rampart, and my job was to prepare the script for somebody to direct it -- not necessarily me; that wasn't even talked about. He wrote a very ambitious, huge script, and I had to streamline it and make the leaner version of what he was doing. In the process I was offered the directing and so the writing process became more intense. It never really stopped through pre-production and production and post-production; we always kept working on it and changing it and making it better, hopefully -- we treated it as something that was constantly evolving until we locked it into the structure that is the film.

There are certain things that carry through thematically from The Messenger. Did you write them into the script, or did were they in the Ellroy draft?

Well, we didn't really work together. Once I started working on the script he gave me notes and things like that, but we never really turned it back to him to write, because you have contracts and things that you have to take into consideration. I wasn't aware of the things that were naturally continuing from The Messenger; I think that there was nothing intentional in it. There were certain themes and certain kinds of characters that sometimes had similar backgrounds, and of course there's the military thing, though it was a smaller element this time; it's another movie about a guy in uniform and the emotional whirlwind that he goes through. So there's definitely a connection, whether I acknowledge it or not.

Were you looking to work with Woody Harrelson again after The Messenger?

Yeah. I mean, that wasn't as planned, as well. Ben [Foster] and I have a company together and we were developing things and trying to get things going, and when this came around we talked about it and said this is a good project for our company to do. So there was definitely an intention of working with Ben again in any capacity. Woody was just a natural idea. The character just felt like a natural for him to get into and interpret. And obviously we're all good friends and we have a way of communicating that's shorthand, so it felt very natural to just keep going with this team.

Woody apparently expressed discomfort with playing a police officer. What was it about him made you think he could do it?

Well he wasn't comfortable with the idea of playing a soldier either [in The Messenger] and I think that's the most interesting thing for me -- taking an actor who's that talented out of his comfort zone, or what he perceives to be his comfort zone, and giving him a challenge in proving to himself that the can be that character. I think it gets a lot more out of him, and that's been the process. I think if I had roles that read like "Woody Harrelson roles" off the page, whatever that means, it would be a lot less interesting.

What is it about your relationship two that works so well?

I don't know... I think it's that we established a lot of trust. It wasn't there from the beginning. When you start working with people for the first time, there's always this period of testing each other and earning respect, and we earned each others' respect. I think that once we learned, on The Messenger, to trust each other, it was very easy to translate that into a different kind of character and still very safe to experiment to get lost in the scenes, and to fail sometimes, and to come up with new ideas. It was just a very dynamic way of working together. And Woody, who claims to love rehearsing and all that kind of stuff, is actually a quick-thinking, great improviser, and we definitely used that in the movie.

The corrupt cop is one of movies' more well-worn staples, and James Ellroy has written them before, but this sets out to be a different kind of take -- a man imploding. Were you consciously trying to redefine the archetype?

Not redefine but deconstruct it and sort of reconfigure it for the purpose of this movie, by concentrating less on plot as something that needs to be resolved, and concentrating more on character and on observations of behavior, and his movements through these situations and who he is -- really giving that the emphasis over a neatly packaged narrative that comes to a resolution and you walk away with that satisfaction of "It's all figured out and it's this guy's fault or that guy's fault." By keeping it more abstract and by constructing a movie that hopefully surprises you. I do think that one of the goals we set out for ourselves was to have a movie that cuts to a place that you don't see coming, and that it keeps you guessing and keeps you involved and keeps you seduced by a very complicated character. Hopefully by the time you're done with it you have your thoughts and observations on this character and then he loses us, as the audience, and we lose him, and we're just in his head. We walk away with that, and hopefully that will spark certain conversations that are not so much about "I didn't see that coming," "I didn't believe that guy was the actual murderer" or anything like that; instead of that you're forced to think about who he was, and whether you liked him or not, whether you felt compassion for it -- the kind that becomes a human conversation, rather than about plot.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1924461/news/1924461/

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Tuesday, February 7, 2012

They're Food Stamps -- Not Junk Food Stamps (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | As reported in an article by the Sun Sentinel, two lawmakers in Florida, Rep. Scott Plakon, R-Longwood and Sen. Ronda Storms, R-Valrico, are attempting to pass legislation that would ban the use of food stamps to purchase soda, sweets, and junk food. While they feel that taxpayers shouldn't have to "foot the bill for Mountain Dew," a sentiment shared by many Americans, some people, including Plakor and Storms' fellow GOP colleagues, feel it's not up to the government to decide what people can and cannot eat.

They're food stamps -- not junk food stamps.

When I was a teenager, I worked as a cashier at a Wal-Mart Supercenter that sold groceries. I can attest that the majority of people who use food stamps buy mass quantities of junk food. Every first of the month was an endless line of baskets full of cubes of pop, bags of chips, Little Debbie snack cakes, TV dinners and any other convenience food you can think of. It was a rare occasion, indeed, when I rang an order that used food stamps to pay and included fruits, veggies, and items to cook dinner.

Before I get a storm of comments saying that I am ignorant and pandering stereotypes, I will say that I know that many people who receive food stamps nowadays are hard-working, middle-class citizens who need help during these tough economical times. I know this.

However, any cashier at a grocery store can attest that many of the people who get food stamps in addition to a goverment-issued welfare check oftentimes are obese, smell, are rude, and buy nothing but absolute junk.

Most of these aforementioned individuals also receive a medical card, which is also taxpayer-funded, so if those of us in the working class have to pay the taxes that fund food stamps and medical cards, there should be a restriction on the food that can be bought with food stamps. It's fruitless, to say the least, to pay for the poison (soda) and the cure (insulin) when obesity and diabetes are becoming rampant in the United States.

Though I do think the public could stand to benefit from food stamps expanding to include soap and deodorant.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/oped/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20120207/cm_ac/10913685_theyre_food_stamps__not_junk_food_stamps

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Monday, February 6, 2012

UN envoy says Myanmar may allow election observers (AP)

YANGON, Myanmar ? A U.N. human rights envoy said Sunday that Myanmar is considering letting foreign observers monitor April elections that are viewed as crucial for gauging the nation's much-heralded democratic reforms.

The envoy, Tomas Ojea Quintana, praised the "continuing wave of reforms in Myanmar, the speed and breadth of which has surprised" Myanmar watchers around the world. Quintana ended a six-day visit to the country on Sunday.

After nearly half a century of iron-fisted military rule in Myanmar, a nominally civilian government took office last March. The new government has surprised even some of the country's toughest critics by releasing hundreds of political prisoners, signing cease-fire deals with ethnic rebels, increasing media freedoms and easing censorship laws.

"My mission confirmed that a positive impact has been made," Quintana said. "However, serious challenges remain and must be addressed. There is also a risk of backtracking on the progress achieved thus far."

During his trip, Quintana met with senior government ministers, political prisoners and Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, the longtime political prisoner whose bid for a parliamentary seat has drawn intense international interest.

He called the upcoming polls "a key test" of the government's commitment to reforms.

"I must stress that the credibility of the elections will not be determined solely on the day of the vote, but on the basis of the entire process leading up to and following election day," Quintana said.

He said that in talks with Myanmar's Election Commission, "I was informed that the use of international observers was under consideration."

Allowing outside monitors would be a major step for the long-isolated country, where international bids to send observers were rejected in 2010 and 1990, the last two elections.

A string of visiting American officials has also singled out the April polls as a measure of whether the West will lift sanctions that were imposed on Myanmar during the military junta's rule.

Quintana cited a number of human rights concerns, noting that authorities continue to detain an unknown number of political prisoners. He urged the government to allow an investigation to determine how many remain behind bars.

The April election is being held to fill 48 parliamentary seats vacated by lawmakers who were appointed to the Cabinet and other posts.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120205/ap_on_re_as/as_myanmar_un

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Self-Awareness, Self-Improvement and Self-Empowerment ? htbcx's ...

This undated photo taken at an unknown location and released by the Danish Refugee Council on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012 shows American Jessica Buchanan from the Danish Refugee Council?s de-mining unit. U.S. military forces helicoptered into Somalia in a nighttime raid Wednesday and freed two hostages, American Jessica Buchanan, 32, and Dane Poul Hagen Thisted, [...]

Source: http://ajudaparamim.info/1244/self-awareness-self-improvement-and-self-empowerment-htbcxs/

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Sunday, February 5, 2012

Just a bluff? Fears grow of Israeli attack on Iran

FILE- In this April, 9, 2007, file photo Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, speaks at a ceremony in Iran's nuclear enrichment facility in Natanz, 300 kms 186 (miles) south of capital Tehran, Iran. For the first time in nearly two decades of escalating tensions over the Iranian nuclear program, it appears that world leaders are genuinely concerned that an Israeli military attack on the Islamic Republic could be imminent, an action that many fear might trigger war, terrorism and global economic havoc. (AP Photo/Hasan Sarbakhshian, File)

FILE- In this April, 9, 2007, file photo Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, speaks at a ceremony in Iran's nuclear enrichment facility in Natanz, 300 kms 186 (miles) south of capital Tehran, Iran. For the first time in nearly two decades of escalating tensions over the Iranian nuclear program, it appears that world leaders are genuinely concerned that an Israeli military attack on the Islamic Republic could be imminent, an action that many fear might trigger war, terrorism and global economic havoc. (AP Photo/Hasan Sarbakhshian, File)

FILE- This March 14, 2007, file photo provided by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency shows crews loading a bomb, the massive ordnance penetrator, in a test at White Sands Missile Range in southern New Mexico. The conventional 30,000-pound penetrating bomb is designed to defeat deeply buried targets such as bunker and tunnel facilities. For the first time in nearly two decades of escalating tensions over the Iranian nuclear program, it appears that world leaders are genuinely concerned that an Israeli military attack on the Islamic Republic could be imminent, an action that many fear might trigger war, terrorism and global economic havoc. (AP photo/Courtesy of the Defense Threat Reduction Agency, File)

File - In this Oct. 26, 2010, file photo, a worker rides a bike in front of the reactor building of the Bushehr nuclear power plant, just outside the southern city of Bushehr, Iran. For the first time in nearly two decades of escalating tensions over the Iranian nuclear program, it appears that world leaders are genuinely concerned that an Israeli military attack on the Islamic Republic could be imminent, an action that many fear might trigger war, terrorism and global economic havoc. (AP Photo/Mehr News Agency, Majid Asgaripour, File)

FILE- In this April 8, 2008, file photo released by the Iranian President's Office, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, center, listens to a technician during his visit of the Natanz Uranium Enrichment Facility some 200 miles (322 kilometers) south of the capital Tehran, Iran. For the first time in nearly two decades of escalating tensions over the Iranian nuclear program, it appears that world leaders are genuinely concerned that an Israeli military attack on the Islamic Republic could be imminent, an action that many fear might trigger war, terrorism and global economic havoc. (AP Photo/Iranian Presidents office, File)

(AP) ? For the first time in nearly two decades of escalating tensions over Iran's nuclear program, world leaders are genuinely concerned that an Israeli military attack on the Islamic Republic could be imminent ? an action that many fear might trigger a wider war, terrorism and global economic havoc.

High-level foreign dignitaries, including the U.N. chief and the head of the American military, have stopped in Israel in recent weeks, urging leaders to give the diplomatic process more time to work. Israel seems unmoved, and U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has reportedly concluded that an Israeli attack on Iran is likely in the coming months.

U.S. President Barack Obama said Sunday he does not think Israel has decided whether to attack Iran, telling NBC News in an interview that the United States was "going to be sure that we work in lockstep as we proceed to try to solve this ? hopefully diplomatically."

Despite harsh economic sanctions and international pressure, Iran is refusing to abandon its nuclear program, which it insists is purely civilian, and threatening Israel and the West.

It's beginning to cause jitters in world capitals and financial markets.

"Of course I worry that there will be a military conflict," Britain's deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg, said in a magazine interview last week. He said Britain was "straining every single sinew to resolve this through a combination of pressure and engagement," rather than military action.

Is Israel bluffing? Israeli leaders have been claiming Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons since the early 1990s, and defense officials have issued a series of ever-changing estimates on how close Iran is to the bomb. But the saber-rattling has become much more direct and vocal.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu frequently draws parallels between modern-day Iran and Nazi Germany on the eve of the Holocaust.

On Thursday, Defense Minister Ehud Barak claimed during a high-profile security conference that there is a "wide global understanding" that military action may be needed.

"There is no argument about the intolerable danger a nuclear Iran (would pose) to the future of the Middle East, the security of Israel and to the economic and security stability of the entire world," Barak said.

A day earlier, visiting U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon implored Israel to find a peaceful solution to the nuclear standoff.

Israel views Iran as a mortal threat, citing Iranian calls for Israel's destruction, Iran's support for anti-Israel militant groups and Iranian missile technology capable of hitting Israel.

On Friday, Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, called Israel a "cancerous tumor that should be cut and will be cut," and boasted of supporting any group that will challenge the Jewish state.

When faced with such threats, Israeli has a history of lashing out in the face of world opposition. That legacy that includes the game-changing 1967 Middle East war, which left Israel in control of vast Arab lands, a brazen 1981 airstrike that destroyed an unfinished Iraqi nuclear reactor, and a stealthy 2007 airstrike in Syria that is believed to have destroyed a nuclear reactor in the early stages of construction.

Armed with a fleet of ultramodern U.S.-made fighter planes and unmanned drones, and reportedly possessing intermediate-range Jericho missiles, Israel has the capability to take action against Iran too, though it would carry grave risks.

It would require flying over Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Syria or Turkey. It is uncertain whether any of these Muslim countries would knowingly allow Israel to use their airspace.

With targets some 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) away, Israeli planes would likely have the complicated task of refueling in flight. Iran's antiquated air force, however, is unlikely to provide much of a challenge.

Many in the region cannot believe Israel would take such a step without a green light from the United States, its most important ally. That sense is deepened by the heightened stakes of a U.S. election year and the feeling that if Israel acts alone, the West would not escape unscathed.

The U.S. has been trying to push both sides, leading the charge for international sanctions while also pressing Israel to give the sanctions more time. In recent weeks, both the U.S. and European Union have imposed harsher sanctions on Iran's oil sector, the lifeblood of its economy, and its central bank. Israeli officials say they want the sanctions to be imposed faster and for more countries to join them.

Last week, The Associated Press reported that officials in Israel ? all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss Iran ? were concerned that the measures, while welcome, were constraining Israel in its ability to act because the world expected the effort to be given a chance.

Even a limited Israeli operation could well unleash regionwide fighting. Iran could launch its Shihab 3 missiles at Israel, and have its local proxies, Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in the Gaza Strip, unleash rockets. Israel's military intelligence chief, Aviv Kochavi, warned last week that Israel's enemies possess some 200,000 rockets.

While sustained rocket and missile fire would certainly make life uncomfortable in Israel, Barak himself has said he believes casualties would be low ? suggesting it would be in the hundreds.

Iran might also try to attack Western targets in the region, including the thousands of U.S. forces based in the Gulf with the 5th Fleet.

An Israeli attack might have other unintended consequences. A European diplomat based in Pakistan, permitted to speak only under condition of anonymity, said that if Israel attacks, Islamabad will have no choice but to support any Iranian retaliation. That raises the specter of putting a nuclear-armed Pakistan at odds with Israel, widely believed to have its own significant nuclear arsenal.

To some, the greatest risk is to the moribund world economy.

Analysts believe an Israeli attack would cause oil prices to spike, since global markets so far have largely dismissed the Israeli threats and not "price in" the threat. According to one poll conducted by the Rapidan Group, an energy consulting firm in Bethesda, Maryland, prices would surge by $23 a barrel. The price of oil settled Friday at $97.84 a barrel.

"Traders don't believe there's anything but bluster going on," said Robert McNally, president of Rapidan and an energy adviser to former President George W. Bush. "A potential Israeli attack on Iran is different than almost every scenario that we've seen before."

McNally said Iran could rattle oil markets by targeting oil fields in southern Iraq or export facilities in Saudi Arabia or Qatar ? and withhold sales of its own oil and natural gas from countries not boycotting.

Iran also could attempt to carry out its biggest threat: to shut the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic waterway through which a fifth of the world's oil passes. That could send oil prices soaring beyond $200 a barrel. But analysts note Iran's navy is overmatched.

If a surge in oil prices proved lasting, financial markets would probably plummet on concerns that global economic growth would slow and on the fear that any conflict could worsen and spread.

For the U.S. economy, higher gasoline prices would likely result in lower consumer spending, which accounts for 70 percent of U.S. economic activity. That could have devastating consequences for an incumbent president seeking re-election.

Nick Witney, former head of the EU's European Defense Agency, said "the political and economic consequences of an Israeli attack would be catastrophic for Europe" since the likely spike in the price of oil alone "could push the entire EU, including Germany, into recession."

He said this could lead to "messy defaults" by countries like Greece and Italy, and possibly cause a collapse of the already-wobbly euro. Witney, a senior fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, added that "the Iranians would probably retaliate against European interests in the region, and conceivably more directly with terrorism aimed at Western countries and societies."

Oil disruptions or higher oil prices will also dent growth in Asia. China, India, South Korea and Japan all buy substantial amounts of Iranian crude and could face temporary shortages.

China's fast-growing economy, which gets 11 percent of its oil from Iran, has urged all sides to avoid disrupting supplies. Any impact on China's economy, the world's second-largest, could send out global shockwaves if it dented Chinese demand for industrial components and raw materials.

Why is the issue coming to a head with such unfortunate timing, with the U.S. election looming and the global economy hanging by a razor's edge?

The urgency is fueled by a belief in Israel that Iran is moving centrifuges and key installations deep underground by the summer ? combined with doubts about whether either Israel or the United States have the bunker-busting capacity to act effectively thereafter.

At last week's security conference, Vice Premier Moshe Yaalon, a former military chief, said all of Iran's nuclear installations are still vulnerable to military strikes. In a startling threat, he appeared to contradict assessments of foreign experts and Israeli defense officials that it would be difficult to strike sensitive Iranian nuclear targets hidden deep underground.

American officials acknowledge the current version of its bunker-buster bombs ? considered the largest non-nuclear bomb in the U.S. arsenal ? may not be able to penetrate Iran's heavily fortified underground facilities. The Pentagon is asking Congress to reprogram about $82 million in order to make the 30,000-pound bunker-buster bomb more capable.

But U.S. officials also say there are a number of ways to cripple or disable the sites, such as targeting entrance and exit routes to an underground facility, rendering it inaccessible.

Israeli officials at the conference asserted that Iran has already produced enough enriched uranium to eventually build four rudimentary nuclear bombs and ? in what would be a new twist ? was even developing missiles capable of reaching the U.S.

Amos Yadlin, the former head of Israel's military intelligence, said the world needed less discussion on the issue. "There is the danger that an escalation could get out of control," he said. "Israel should go back to what it does best: Shut up."

___

David Stringer in London, Slobodan Lekic in Brussels, Brian Murphy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Lolita Baldor in Washington, Business Writer Joe McDonald in Beijing, and Energy Writer Jonathan Fahey and Business Writer Pallavi Gogoi in New York contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-02-05-ML-Israel-Iran/id-9e35e79082744b19b88569dda0db6258

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Video: Will Israel attack Iran soon?

NBC?s Bob Windrem joins NewsNation to discuss.

>> windrum. what happens if it does take place in.

>> i think the first question is whether it succeeds or not and at what level. one thing that is critical and david has reported this as well, is that this is not plan to destroy the iranian nuclear program . this is plan to slow it. something to essentially tell it will iranians we can do this, we can keep doing this, and we will keep you at bay. the question is what happens if it fails? i think that is something the usual officials are concerned about because they all know if it does fail, the israelis will be raising their hand and asking us for help and also the saudis may be raising their hand and saying can you help us.

>> let's follow the story line of if it does fail, we know we are entering a general election soon. this president has been criticized saying he's not loyal to israel despite proof otherwise, this all has to come into play with whatever decision the united states follows, i would imagine.

>> one thing that some diplomats in the middle east fear is this will take place at a time when optimum time politically, we are in the middle of an election campaign and at that point the politicians will go forward and try to vie among themselves for who can be most supportive of israel and that could affect a decision on the u.s. military action.

>> all right. bob, thank you very much.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/newsnation/46255836/

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Saturday, February 4, 2012

New York Health Insurance Plans ? Home Based Businesses and ...

Feb 2nd, 2012

Deciding which health insurance provider can offer you, the most health insurance coverage at the best price is difficult enough. When you are operating a home based business, the choices of low cost health insurance become slightly estranged. Most individuals are aware that when they purchase a health insurance policy through a group the overall cost is divided amongst all those who are involved.

This is a method to lower the cost of health insurance for each individual because in larger group numbers there is a base figure for the health insurance provider to work. As an individual involved in operating a home based business there are still a few avenues you can research to purchase an affordable health insurance policy, but it will take some work.

1. Join a group, like the local Chamber of Commerce

2. Research health insurance providers who cater to small businesses

3. Gather information of your personal medical needs

4. Research health insurance coverage that will suit you

5. Research the advantages of a health savings account

Colleges, Universities, an alumni association, professional and amateur sports teams, and the local Chamber of Commerce all have low cost health insurance group plans that will accommodate the needs of those enrolled. This is an option to consider before purchasing an individual health insurance policy at a higher cost.

Many of the health insurance providers do offer affordable health insurance coverage with the small business in mind and may be another avenue for you to research before making any decision. The competition between health insurance providers is often an overlooked factor in finding a health insurance plan that will suit your needs and that of your home based business.

Home based businesses are hard pressed to purchase an affordable health insurance policy for medical protection because one catastrophic event can compromise your business and that is not what you want to happen. It does no good to procrastinate and eventually find your business is no more because you neglected to find an affordable health insurance policy to help cover the cost of your personal medical requirements.

Researching which health insurance plan will provide for your personal needs will take time, but the end will be justified the first time you experience a high medical bill from your health care provider. Another viable option is to research the possibility of acquiring a health savings account. This will afford you much more flexibility as opposed to the traditional health insurance policy that deals with the HMO, PPO, and POS.

Source: http://www.nyhealthinsurer.com/2012/news/home-based-businesses-and-health-insurance/

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Source: http://takylaov.posterous.com/new-york-health-insurance-plans-home-based-bu

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Egyptian comedian sentenced to jail for offending Islam

By msnbc.com staff and news services

Egyptian veteran comedian Adel Imam.

CAIRO --One of the Arab world's best-known comedians was sentenced to three months in jail for offending Islam on Thursday, just weeks after Islamist parties won a majority in parliament.

A judge, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to reporters, told The Associated Press that Adel Imam was convicted in absentia of "defaming Islam." His whereabouts were unknown, the AP reported.

A lawyer with ties to Islamist groups, Asran Mansour, brought the case, judicial sources told The Guardian.


"I think the lawyer who filed the case against Imam is taking advantage of the current circumstances with Islamists gaining power in Egypt," Nabil Abdel Fattah, an analyst and researcher at al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies in Cairo, told the newspaper.

The sentence, which he thought would probably be overturned on appeal, had likely been handed down because the actor had failed to go to court, according to the newspaper. He said the sentence had likely been handed down because Imam had failed to appear in court, the Guardian reported.

At least 74 people were killed and hundreds more injured when rival soccer fans in Egypt rioted after a match. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports from Cairo.

The state-run Ahram Online English website reported he was found guilty for a 2007 movie in which he plays a corrupt businessman and a 1998 play about an Arab dictator. Other reports said the court objected to his use of Islamic symbols.

Chaotic scenes as injured soccer fans return to Cairo after riot

In the 1980's, Imam was sentenced to three months in jail for defaming lawyers in a film. That ruling was later overturned.

Msnbc.com and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Source: http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/02/10300520-egyptian-comedian-sentenced-to-jail-for-offending-islam

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Friday, February 3, 2012

Mastering Real Estate Investing

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By: Louise Carter

Investing in Real Estate for profit could be rewarding. It could be a money generating investment and mastering in it could mean success to investors. Here are some ways to help you assure success in real estate investing:

Old tricks versus young bloods. It is helpful for aspiring investors to listen to the more experienced ones. You listen to their tips and advices in real estate investing. You also get references and prospected new clients from them. Yes it is good to listen to the many tips but new investors should be vigilant on which tips to follow. It is also good for new investors to try new techniques in real estate investing to break from the routine and get ahead of the pack. It is a bit risky, but when it worked it will be truly rewarding. After all, personal experience is the best teacher.

Focus on your goal. A clear vision of your goals in investing is a great driving force for success.For example, what do you expect in investing in a real estate property? Do you want to see the results of your real estate investment sooner, or are you up to a bigger gain but which requires time and effort? It can also be helpful to set short term goals at first beacuase being able to turn these goals into reality will lift your motivation for a much bigger goal. For example, set your goal to close a deal within the week even if it is just a small deal. After realization of that goal, you could now set a new goal aiming for a bigger deal.

It pays to be persistent. Real estate property are assets with slower liquidity. In some cases you will not see the result of your real estate investment as soon but over the time. So being persistent and dedicated could be rewarding when you successfully closed a deal at the right time and at the right circumstances. Many investors often have the right goals but tend to disregard this attitude and simply give in to situations that hinder success. But the persistent ones does not look at the hindrances but still focus on their goals doing whatever is possible to ensure success.

Invest, invest, invest. Do not hesitate to look for new potential projects after the other. Keep on buying and selling real estate properties to earn profit on a regular basis. Setting a goal, as mentioned above, requires you to also set the amount of money you would allocate for your investment. So, in order to keep your investment cycle running you should keep on funding your investment. But this does not mean you'll have to touch the money from your own personal account. There are loans that could help you finance your investment and keep the cycle running.

All it takes is the right attitude plus the right motivation and the right management to become successful in real estate investing.

Author Resource:->??Louise Carter is a proud contributing author and writes articles on several subjects including real estate. You can learn more about how to find quality Chandler Homes for sale as well as find comprehensive Chandler real estate listings in our website.

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Source: http://www.articlecupboard.net/Art/415446/226/Mastering-Real-Estate-Investing.html

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Video: Eagles could be super in 2012

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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/21134540/vp/46223388#46223388

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