Thursday, January 8, 2015

Obama Admin. Unleashes 300 Regulations In The First Week Of 2015

Obama Admin. Unleashes 300 Regulations In The First Week Of 2015 



This year is already seeing a wave of new regulations being published in the Federal Register as the Obama administration unveils 300 new rules in the first seven days of 2015, according to federal data.
Federal agencies have published 300 final rules, proposals for new rules and regulatory notices in the seven days since the new year began, according to the website Regulations.gov. The bulk of these new regulations are notices, which can lead to rulemakings, meetings and other government activities.
Rules having to do with energy, environment, public lands and agriculture make up the largest share of new regulations. Included in these new rules are proposed EPA air quality standards for lead, reforming coal and oil leases on Indian lands and adjustments for the total amount of fish people can catch off Alaska’s coast.
One major rule that has not been finalized yet, however, is the EPA’s carbon dioxide emissions limits for new power plants. The rule was set to be finalized by Thursday, but the agency announced Wednesday it would be pushed back until mid-summer 2015.
“This is all about the best policy outcome, and the appropriate policy outcome,”Janet McCabe, EPA’s acting clean air administrator, told reporters on Wednesday. “That is what we are talking about here, and that is why we think it is important to finalize these rules in the same time frame.
EPA’s rule would limit the amount of carbon dioxide that can be emitted by newly built coal- and natural gas-fired power plants. But the power plant rule has been attacked by critics because it sets the carbon dioxide threshold for coal plants so low the only way operators can meet the standard is by using carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology.
CCS has been touted by the Obama administration and the environmentalists as the best solution for coal plants, but the technology has yet to be used on a commercial scale without the help of government subsidies.
Republicans and the coal industry have challenged the legality of EPA’s de facto CCS mandate, saying requiring coal plants to install subsidized technology violates federal law. But the EPA insists the rule is legally sound.
Sources within the EPA have previously told The Daily Caller News Foundationthat EPA is scrambling to protect its carbon rule for new power plants as lawmakers and watchdog groups continue to find problems with the agency’s reasoning for mandating CCS.
In arguing that CCS was viable technology, the EPA relied on a major project in Mississippi called Kemper. But Kemper has been beset by huge cost overruns and delays, hurting the agency’s argument that the technology is workable. Kemper was also given a $270 million grant by the Obama administration and will be eligible for $279 million in tax credits when it begins operation.
The plant’s opening date, however, has been pushed from June 2015 to March 2016 and additional delays could cost $20 to $30 million a month.

CIA Insider: "Forget Iran, Iraq, Ukraine, and Syria this is where WWIII will start"

CIA Insider: "Forget Iran, Iraq, Ukraine, and Syria this is where WWIII will start"

By MONEY MORNING STAFF REPORTS
Should the rise of conflicts across the Middle East and Ukraine serve as a warning sign that something much more dangerous is approaching?
According to Jim Rickards, the CIA's Asymmetric Warfare Advisor, the answer is yes.
In a startling interview he reveals that all 16 U.S. Intelligence Agencies have begun to prepare for World War III.
Making matters worse, his colleagues believe it could begin within the next 6 months.
However, the ground zero location for this global conflict is what makes his interview a must-see for every American.
Take a few moments to watch it below and decide for yourself.

Eliminating 100 million U.S. tax returns

Eliminating 100 million U.S. tax returns


On March 28, the U.S. Justice Department sought to close a nationwide chain of income tax preparation shops it accuses of fraud. The action underscores the potential for abusive business practices that taxpayers face because Congress has failed to embrace technology that would eliminate most tax returns.
The Justice Department wants a federal judge to shut down Instant Tax Service, whose sole owner is Fesum Ogbazion of Dayton, Ohio, saying he is responsible for “extensive and pervasive tax fraud.” It also sued four of his 276 franchisees. The company has not responded to the lawsuit.
Congress could easily eliminate fraud by abusive tax preparers, as is alleged in the Ogbazion case, and save taxpayers billions of dollars annually, by simply ending mandatory filing of tax returns for most taxpayers.
About 100 million taxpayers — those whose income is entirely from wages and retirement funds, and who do not itemize deductions — should not have to file returns. The government already has the information it needs to calculate the taxes these people owe, once they supply their marital status and number of dependents. It would not take much to automate their income tax payments, as many other modern countries do.
I put the chances of Congress taking such a sensible course at one in 84,000. That’s about the same as the odds of being indicted for a tax crime in 2011, based on an analysis of official data by Syracuse University’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse.
Congress will not act because individual income tax returns, which for most people are make-work that creates a drag on the economy, provide tidy revenues for Intuit, the maker of TurboTax software, H&R Block and other legitimate corporations that profit from preparing tax returns. These companies have considerable resources at their disposal to spend on lobbying politicians to keep the tax filing requirement. One sign of their determination: Intuit in 2006 donated $1 million in support of an unsuccessful candidate for California state controller who opposed optional state-prepared returns in California. Intuit has said there are serious problems with the program, which remains in operation, but in my view none of Intuit’s criticisms stands up to scrutiny.
A SIMPLER TAX CODE
Intuit, H&R Block and other tax firms say that they help people pay the least tax and avoid costly mistakes. But these concerns would be easily addressed by simplifying the tax code. In my view, any business that depends on government-induced inefficiency should be swept into the dustbin of history.
Another reason reform is unlikely is that politicians have learned from Republican pollster Frank Luntz over the years that riling up voters against the Internal Revenue Service attracts votes and campaign donations. Actually fixing the problem by ending tax filing for the vast majority would require politicians to come up with other ways to get donors to open their checkbooks. Republican politicians who follow Luntz’s advice seem not to realize they are attacking law enforcement, a strategy that would offend many of their donors if applied to the FBI or street cops.
Short of ending tax filing for most Americans, Congress could license tax preparers — instead of only requiring that they identify themselves with a unique number. We don’t trust amateurs to inspect elevators or audit charities, so why do we let just anyone charge for preparing tax returns? This is especially true given that U.S. Taxpayer Advocate Nina E. Olson has thoroughly documented false and fraudulent reporting by tax preparers who are exempt from IRS professional conduct rules because they are not accountants, enrolled agents or lawyers.
The case of Instant Tax Service appears to be particularly egregious. The Justice Department alleges that the company charges its customers, who are mostly poor and unsophisticated, as much as $1,000 for 15 minutes of tax preparation. It “encourages its franchisees to lie to the IRS about anything,” the department said in court papers.
The government’s complaint quoted Ogbazion, the company’s owner, as saying that “every tax return being done is pretty much fraudulent” at a franchise in Los Angeles. Ogbazion did not revoke the franchise, but did sue it for royalties, the department said. According to the Justice Department, Ogbazion said he did not pay attention to customer complaints because, if he did, he “wouldn’t be able to sleep at night.”
Ogbazion’s business and personal phones are disconnected. At the one listed number that was answered a woman said he was no longer reachable there. Ogbazion also did not respond to messages to his work and home email addresses.
100 MILLION UNNECESSARY RETURNS
The Justice Department brings a high-profile tax case pretty much every year as the mid-April tax deadline approaches. But this misses the much bigger picture: More than 100 million unnecessary tax returns are filed each year, costing billions of dollars in software or preparation.
Meanwhile, the way Congress has written tax laws, and the way courts interpret them, makes it hard to pursue tax cheats. The average time for each criminal tax prosecution the Justice Department completed last year was 740 days, more than double the 345 days in 1992. Last year, the Justice Department completed only 3,656 criminal cases in which tax was the main charge, the analysis by Syracuse University’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse shows. No wonder the odds of a criminal tax indictment, while still minute, were 75 percent higher two decades ago.
The Justice Department relies on a law enforcement theory known as general deterrence. The strategy is to bring widely publicized cases to keep people in line. But the IRS criminal division website lists just 79 criminal cases in 2011. Figuring the others requires perusing 90 websites run by local U.S. Attorneys. Many convictions get little or no news coverage, which means zero general deterrence.
Canada, with a ninth of the U.S. population, listed all 204 tax convictions last year at the Canada Revenue Agency’s website. Claude St-Pierre, Canada’s director general for tax enforcement and disclosures, told me that posting all convictions is both a deterrence strategy and an effort to educate Canadians so they do not get lured into tax scams.
Congress should fund more prosecutions, many more, so the Justice Department does not have to reject 40 to 50 percent of criminal referrals by the IRS. Following Ottawa’s lead, the IRS should prominently post every criminal conviction and every request for a civil injunction (a much less expensive law enforcement strategy than prosecution) at its website.
The real solution, though, is to get rid of the archaic, frustrating make-work for 100 million taxpayers whose only benefit is profits for tax preparation firms.

THE WORLDS LARGEST CRIME SCENE....



THE WORLDS LARGEST
CRIME SCENE…


http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRoi_-w9qTDZ6G5s_jhzMShKsIizdb7Rz_d6RKdU_fOpZ-mGasnvg


SUPREME COURT OF THE CABAL
CROOKS AND MOBSTERS…
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQw5fEEzhkEVjjs_FeLL8q_4uYgbXyUeEBGxR8xEUXIkk3YxTdy


US CAPITOL BUILDING WHERE THE


CON-(ARTISTS)-GRESS PLAY…


WHERE ARE THE CHEMTRAILS OVER THIS BUILDING??


SOMEONE SHOW GENERAL HAM HOW TO GET  HERE…


WHWHEN ARE WE GOING TO DO SOMETHING ABOUT THIS MESS??


MORE FALSE FLAG SHOOTINGS?


 
THE PUSH IS ON FOR RACE RIOTS, MARTIAL LAW AND GUN CONFISCATION - THE NWO AGENDA .......
 
Bulletin: Parallels between NYPD and Paris shooting
 
 
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IN HONOR OF A FALLEN AMERICAN PATRIOT


From a retired US Marine:  Received this notice January 7th and passing on to all American militiamen ......................


 
IN HONOR OF A FALLEN AMERICAN PATRIOT

Received word Monday January 5th around 8 PM CST that Drew Rayner passed away Sunday January 4th around 2:30 PM CST at the Stone County Hospital in Wiggins MS.

Drew made it to 75 years. Drew had lung cancer and pneumonia when he died.

Drew founded the Mississippi Militia back in 1992 after Clinton became POTUS and the Brady Bill was passed. The group was founded in Jackson County MS and monthly meetings were held. Drew remained Commander of the Mississippi Militia for over 10 years until different factions in different parts of the state began surfacing.

Drew was successful in the South Haven MS  Campaign around the 1994 time period. Drew networked with units Nationwide during this period. The South Haven Government backed down on an Eminent Domain proceeding against a fellow patriot.  Drew attended the Reform Party Convention in Nashville back in 2002.

I spoke with Drew via cellphone in early December. From what I understand, he went into the Stone County Hospital around December 20th due to issue's associated with pneumonia. When I talked with his wife tonight, the arrangements had not been set, but I will keep everybody posted when I find out more details. She said that the Obituary and Arrangements would appear in the Sun Herald.

SLAUGHTER OF WHITES IN SOUTH AFRICA

 
SLAUGHTER OF WHITES IN
SOUTH AFRICA

The following message was received early this morning. Sharing with you so you will know what is happening in South Africa.  Most likely you are not seeing any reports about this on the 'news' in America.  This will happen here if we do not take care of 'business' in America - meaning the cabal criminal organization posing as the government and headquartered in Washington, DC.
 
PLEASE PRAY FOR SOUTH AFRICA 
PLEASE LIFT UP THE FAMILIES AND COMMUNITIES THAT ARE BEING AFFECTED
BY THIS NEEDLESS SLAUGHTER

WE SEND OUR DEEPEST SYMPATHIES TO THE FAMILY AND FRIENDS OF THE VICTIMS
WE WILL NOT FORGET THIS
WE WILL CONTINUE TO LIFT YOU UP FOR THE PROTECTION AND GUIDANCE OF THE LORD GOD ALMIGHTY AND FOR PEACE IN YOUR HEARTS AND SOULS

America, if you wish to express your condolences, feel free to comment below. 

SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE SURVIVES MUTINY

   Waiting for            
      John Boehner's Revenge

The Atlantic
 
SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE SURVIVES MUTINY - BUT WILL THE MUTINEERS SURVIVE THE SPEAKER?  
 
First came the rebellion, now what about the consequences? That is the predicament now confronting John Boehner as he plots how to respond to Tuesday's historic rebellion, in which two dozen of his own members refused to support his reelection as House speaker in a televised vote.

It's a question that has vexed the affable Ohio Republican throughout his tenure. First, some context: John Boehner has never been the revenge type.

When Tea Party-inspired conservatives began bucking him shortly after he became House speaker in 2011, he did little more than shrug. Boehner campaigned on a promise of opening up the House from its highly-centralized control under Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and the rebellions, he suggested, flowed naturally from that change. "Let the House work its will," was his motto. Not every bill would pass, and that was okay by him.

The revolts continued. Conservatives thwarted his attempt to strike a grand bargain with President Obama on the deficit and nearly sent the nation into default. Boehner grew frustrated, but still, he took no action against the dissidents. There wasn't much he could do, he said, and this too was a point of pride. Historically, party leaders had used earmarks to secure loyalty by doling out—or threatening to cancel—pet spending projects that lawmakers routinely brought home to their districts. But in one of his first acts as speaker, Boehner banned earmarks, moving in a single stroke to enact a significant personal achievement while removing one of the critical tools his predecessors had used to do their jobs.

Nearly two years later, Boehner and his leadership team finally moved against four of their most frequent Republican antagonists, stripping them of key committee assignments. The move backfired. Conservatives labeled it a "purge," and a month later, three of the targeted members joined with several other colleagues to embarrass Boehner on the floor of the House with a badly-organized attempt to oust him as speaker. The next two years were no easier for the leadership, which continued to struggle passing key legislation without relying on Democrats for help.

That brings us to Tuesday, when the revolt against Boehner more than doubled in size from 2013, and 24 Republicans backed someone else for speaker. Unlike two years ago, this opposition did not catch the leadership by surprise. Within hours of the vote, word got out that the strongest of Boehner's three challengers, Representative Daniel Webster of Florida, and one of his 12 supporters, Rich Nugent of Florida, had been removed from their posts on the Rules Committee. (Whether getting thrown off the Rules Committee, a plum but pretty boring assignment, is actually a punishment is another debate, but its members are appointed by the speaker.) A third dissident, Tim Huelskamp of Kansas, told reporters that within an hour of sending a tweet announcing his intent to vote against Boehner, a committee chairman (whom he would not name) called him to tell him a subcommittee post he wanted was now gone.
Daniel Webster and Rich Nugent (Left: John Raoux/AP, Right: Charles Dharapak/AP)

Yet even those punishments might not stick. Predictably, conservatives immediately denounced the moves against Webster and Nugent. Ted Yoho, another of Boehner's Florida challengers, was overheard by a Roll Call reporter comparing the speaker to Vladimir Putin and his even stronger-armed Soviet predecessors. "Hey, welcome to the new USSR," he said. (Just an hour or so earlier, Yoho was telling reporters that his beef with Boehner had been "laid to rest" after the speaker vote.) On Wednesday morning, in the first meeting of the full House GOP conference in the new Congress, other conservatives rose to protest any retributive action. "I voiced what I think is an ubiquitous opinion among the conference that revenge should never be any part of any equation like this," Representative Trent Franks, a conservative who had backed Boehner, told reporters afterward.

"Nothing sows the seeds of revolution more effectively among family members than vengeful retribution."

At a subsequent press conference, Boehner turned to euphemisms and said that no final decisions about committee assignments had been made, pending "a family conversation" among Republicans. That talk began on Wednesday and would continue. Pointedly, the speaker refused to say whether any of the 20-odd other members who rebelled were safe from punishment. As for Webster and Nugent, they hadn't been returned to the Rules Committee, but neither had their replacements been named.

What's important to understand is that the question of punishment is not about Boehner alone. For years, his allies have pushed him to crack down on the most disloyal members of the conference, as have other Republicans frustrated that they must take tough votes even as colleagues rebel without consequence.

On the evening before Tuesday's vote, an Ohio friend of Boehner's, Pat Tiberi, was asked by a reporter whether the members who voted against the speaker should be reprimanded in some way. He paused, and briefly smiled. "I'm not going to go there," he replied. "I'll get in trouble."

The trouble is now in Boehner's office. Having moved swiftly against Webster and Nugent, he'll look weak if he pulls back entirely. But a more aggressive response risks inflaming the many conservatives who helped him secure another two years as speaker on Tuesday. All in all, it's quite a quandary for the second day of the term.

                       

U.S. House - Business as usual


U.S. House fails to pass Republican bill diluting Dodd-Frank reforms

Reuters
 
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives failed on Wednesday to round up enough votes for a bill scaling back various financial reforms, a surprising defeat in an area conservatives hoped to prioritize this year.

Republican Party leaders brought forward numerous bills to revamp financial reforms under President Barack Obama's Democratic administration and hoped to make more dramatic changes after taking control of both houses of the U.S. Congress in last November's congressional elections.
Before the vote on Wednesday, Democrats slammed the bill as a Republican effort to chip away at the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial law, including one provision that would have given banks extra time to comply with part of the Volcker rule.

Supporters fell six votes short of what was needed to send the legislation to the U.S. Senate. The proposal was among the first votes House lawmakers took after returning to Washington this week.
"We're tired of really bad Wall Street giveaways being tacked onto other legislation," Representative Jan Schakowsky, a Democrat from Illinois, said on the House floor before the vote.

Some Democrats also were unhappy that the bill contained complex provisions that went straight to the floor without the ability to offer changes first. A House Democratic aide said Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi urged her members not to support the bill even after voting had begun.

Republicans said the bill would help small businesses raise capital by loosening disclosure rules and making other changes related to the 2012 Jumpstart Our Business Startups (JOBS Act). The most controversial aspect of the proposal was the section related to the Volcker rule, which bans banks from making risky trades with their own money and prohibits certain investments in financial products. The bill gave banks more time to exit positions in collateralized loan obligations, or CLOs, which are essentially bundles of business loans. Banks had complained that they would have to quickly abandon those investments.

Republicans said House Democrats had voted for similar provisions in the last Congress. "They were for this bill before they were against it," said Representative Jeb Hensarling of Texas, who leads the House Financial Services Committee.

The package also drew criticism because it would have exempted about 60 percent of public companies from filing financial statements in a machine-readable format called "XBRL" that is used by U.S. regulators and investors.
 

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

The Obama Deception and BIG EVENT in 2015


FINAL WARNING:
 
The Obama Deception & BIG EVENT IN 2015
 
(Prophecy Happening Now)  12 mts 
 
 
 

***********************
 
The Obama Deception -- Full Length Version
 
 

All the pre-planned MKUltra shootings across the nation, one right after another, get ready for the coming GUN CONFISCATION in America!!