Tuesday, 30 March 2010

Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2 Stimulus

UPDATE:This tweet just came in from Daniel Maher XBOX Live Editor; "Stimulus Package Update: the pack is set to go live at 12pm UTC, which means 1pm in the UK. However, it may not appear until as late as 5pm".

This translates to as early as 8 am ET/ 5 am PT and as late as 12 pm ET/ 9 am PT. Expect your game ready for download this morning!

Twitchy Games are in for a treat as the new DLC Map Pack Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2: Stimulus Package release time is today. According to World Correspondents you can expect your new map packs to be available by 9 PM PST. Of course that is a conservative estimate and as soon as I know the exact date this will be updated. Five new maps are featured Bailout, Crash, Salvage, Storm and Overgrown and the cost will be $15 or 1200 Microsoft points. This release is only for XBOX Users. PS3 and PC users will still have to wait a few more weeks.

While you wait for release time you can watch this trailer for the new DLC Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2 Stimulus Package new Map Pack.

Monday, 29 March 2010

When is passover 2010?

The passover 2010, begins from Monday, March 29 and is an eight day commemoration of the Jewish Exodus from Egypt. During the Passover, no leavened bread is consumed and meals include Matzo, meat and herbs, Harsoret, eggs, greens and the like.

MANY PEOPLE are browsing online for Passover Recipes as the Passover, the eight day Jewish commemoration of the Hebrews escape from slavery in Egypt, in the first Jewish month of the year, Nisan. The Passover this year, begins on Monday, March 29 and last for eight days, to end on April 6.

The passover, as per the Biblical story, occurred at the time of the Exodus of Hebrew people from Egypt, where they had been ensalved under the Egyptian pharohs for eons, before Moses led them away from Egypt. Specifically when, according to the Hebrew bible, God sent the tenth plague to Egypt, killing all firstborn, death passed over the homes of the Hebrews, who had marked their doorposts with the blood of a spring lamb.

During the Passover, no leavened bread is consumed and meals include Matzo, meat and herbs, apart from Apple nut compote in red wine called Harsoret, eggs, greens and the like. A few common Passover recipes doing the rounds on the internet are:

The Seder Plate

The centerpiece of Passover meals is the Seder plate, which includes the symbolic foods which represent the harsh life of the enslaved Hebrews. The Seder plate takes a lot of time to prepare and contains six items on it, placed in a special order.

The Seder plate contains the Skank bone, a representation of the lamb sacrificed on the Passover night. As the sacrifice cannot be placed in the absence of a holy temple, people often put a roasted chicken neck in its place. Apart from this, there is the Matzo, a hard boiled egg, horseraddish roots (as bitter herbs), the Harsoret (as paste), onion or boiled potato (the vegetable) and Romaine Lettuce.

Carp Gefilte Fish

Ingrediants

4 pounds carp, ground
2 carrots, or 1 medium raw beet, peeled and grated
1 onion, ground
2 eggs, beaten
2 tablespoons horseradish, white or red
1 cooked egg, mashed
1 teaspoon salt
Basic Fish Sauce

Directions

Whip up the onion, eggs, and vegetables. Combine with ground fish and all seasonings. Mix well and set aside. Form fish mixture into balls, which should be added into the Basic fish sauce broth (boiling), left to simmer for two hours. After this, remove the balls from the liquid and place in a large serving platter.

Apple Sponge Cake

Ingrediants

7 eggs (yolk and white separated)
1 cup sugar
Juice of 1 lemon (3 tablespoons)
1/2 cup hot water
3/4 cup potato starch
1/2 cup ground nuts
2 apples, sliced thinly

Directions

Beat the egg whites until stiff with 1/2 cup sugar and set aside. Mix the egg yolks with the remaining sugar, water, lemon juice, potato starch, and nuts. Fold into egg whites and add sliced apples. Bake the mix for 45 minutes on low flame and leave to cool, before serving.

Written by Stephan K

Friday, 26 March 2010

We Use Coupons

WeUseCoupons.com is an online community full of people who use coupons and discuss when and where to use them! There are tons of resources available on the web about couponing. Forums are another great tool to check out to keep up with good deals and sales! The more of us working together, the more money we can save.

Tuesday, 23 March 2010

Healthcare Reform Will Have Immediate Benefits

New Health Care Bill Summary

Every citizen in the World looks for quality health insurance. The plan of this health insurance is good for America which will put Americans back in control of their health.

Obama said that the bill would create a health care system, that works better for American people. Through this bill 32 million additional American citizen's obtains health insurance coverage.

In any business, maximum of the companies will have more than 50 workers. The company which is having more than 50 workers would provide $2,000 per each worker. Insurance companies would no longer to delay their insurance coverage. And for years, our leaders have fought to bring the promise of quality, affordable health care to every American. Now it happens.

Obama gave this quality health insurance as a good gift to middle-class families. The best health system and services in the world, if people cannot afford health care, they cannot get health care. That is why making health care affordable is a pertinent first step toward reform.

Obama said that the bill would create a health care system, that works better for American people. Through this bill 32 million additional American citizen's obtains health insurance coverage.

Obama gave this quality health insurance as a good gift to middle-class families. The best health system and services in the world, if people cannot afford health care, they cannot get health care. That is why making health care affordable is a pertinent first step toward reform.

In any business, maximum of the companies will have more than 50 workers. The company which is having more than 50 workers would provide $2,000 per each worker. Insurance companieswould no longer to delay their insurance coverage. And for years, our leaders have fought to bring the promise of quality, affordable health care to every American. Now it happens.

nelsonhompson - About the Author:

How Will Healthcare Bill Affect You?




From hospitals to small business owners, questions still loom.

Healthcare Reform Effects

Monday, 22 March 2010

Congress Approves Historic Health Care Legislation



Congress Approves Historic Health Care Legislation Mon, 22 Mar 2010

Health bill passes House

Lawmakers in the House of Representatives thumbed their noses at their constituents as they voted to provide a glidepath to federal takeover of a very personal part of your life — the relationship between you and your doctor.

The momentum already was with the Democrats when the White House as able to strike a deal with Congressman Bart Stupak, a leader of a band of anti-abortion Democrats. That agreement accelerated the momentum to a wind just strong enough to put socialized medicine over the finish line.

President Obama satisfied Stupak when he promised to sign an executive order saying there will be no funding for abortions under the new legislation.

Former GOP House Majority Leader Dick Armey said he was "stunned" that Stupak would fall for a "stunt like that. An executive order does not trump the law of the land." And the Senate bill which the House was poised to pass Sunday night is widely interpreted as allowing taxpayer funded abortions. Moreover, an executive order can be reversed by the current president — not to mention by some successor who is not bound by any such promise to Stupak and Co.

More to come

This doesn't end the drama — though it certainly marks the most significant turning point. Waiting in the wings are the so-called "fixes" that congressional leaders were hoping would satisfy wavering Democrats in the House who had problems — of one kind or another — with the Senate-passed bill.

Beyond that, there are lawsuits lining up to take the fight to the courts. They will drag on for years unless the opposition can persuade judges to put the measure on a fast track or order that the bill's implementation be put on hold while the legal process quickly runs its course. Neither is seen as likely. So the process of government control of one-sixth of the nation's economy started Sunday night. The train has left the station.

Saving lives: America's so-called "defective" health care

Still it will take some time — years — to get the system fully in place. It is questionable whether the Republicans can repeal the measure even if they win big-time in the November midterm elections.

Perhaps we should encourage — only halfway facetiously — a program to facilitate trips to Canada or Mexico by the liberals who have agitated for governmentcare for lo these many years. There are reasons why many Canadians have chosen to use our medical facilities, just as there are reasons why many of the aliens who illegally crash our borders with Mexico do so for the specific purpose of getting "free" service in our emergency rooms — causing many of them to shut down in California and elsewhere.

Left-wing ideologues in this country have repeatedly said (if not in this exact language), "Well, we're the only industrialized country that does not guarantee "free" health care for all. Therefore we must follow in lockstep with the socialist societies of the world and show how mature and 'with it' we are."

Why not buy a train, plane, or bus ticket and hand it to anyone who claims our health care system is inferior to Canada's and Mexico's?

Or China's?

While millions of liberals are falling all over each other to make this mass exodus (Not!), the rest of us can contemplate what top-down government control of health care can mean, and what we will be throwing away by tossing out the best health care system in the world (for all its shortcomings). Take China, for example:

This is the story of an American woman living in Chungking, China, who was told by a Chinese doctor there was "something wrong" with her unborn baby and that she would need to undergo an abortion.

No way was she going to allow that. So the American woman went to Hong Kong (now part of Red China) and was told by another specialist that there was indeed something wrong with the baby and the child would probably die.

The American woman went back to the doctor in Chungking every week, and he would tell her to "get rid of this inconvenience."

Her husband was able to arrange for the expectant mother to return to the U.S., where her family lined her up with nine specialists, and she was told that there had been an improvement and that the baby would live. The specialists were available at birth to perform necessary surgery.

Today, that baby is a beautiful four-year-old girl whose family loves her as "adorable." She does have problems. She has something called Turner syndrome, which is "very easily and well treated in this country," according to a medical professional in an interview with this column. In China, the medical professionals can't do that.

Thus an example of the great superiority of a "progressive" health care system over America's "antiquated" health care machinery. It is more than reasonable to raise the question of whether any such personal attention will be accorded similar scenarios once the system voted through on Sunday is embedded in this country. Good-bye to the America that respects the "human" factor in health care, as opposed to the systems that see less than perfect babies and senior citizens as "inconveniences."

Health "care" providers

The idea of "free" health care is already causing egregious waste and abuse. As a health care professional who has been a nurse for 42 years says, the current Medicaid program — aimed at helping the poor — is rife with abuses leading to situations where only one child is sick, for instance, but the families will "trot in all their children and expect them all to be seen."

This health care provider adds, "Our hospitals probably waste" millions of dollars each year. "People are showing up and using the emergency room like a clinic," she told this column. "I think a totally public system is going to cause more abuse. I don't see that as the kind of 'reform' we need to make. We need to work on reforming the fraud and abuse rather than putting more layers of bureaucracy on top of it which would lead to more fraud and abuse."

And small business

That sentiment was echoed by a small businessman we interviewed.

Said he: "If somebody had said a long time ago 'Are you for health care reform?' I would have said yes, and I think a lot of people would have said yes on the basis that when you go to the doctor's — and you have insurance like we have — all of a sudden you start getting all these bills. And they're from five different people — for five different amounts. They don't make any sense. But implementing reform of situations such as that — I don't think that's what they're doing. I think we're going to see more of that anyway."

This particular businessman's shop provides health insurance to employees there. But his shop has so few employees that he hopes to escape the worst impact through exemptions. However, there is a tiny minority of his staff not covered — part-timers, secondary jobs, etc. If any of those people must answer questions from the hundreds of new IRS agents unleashed to enforce the new law (that everyone must purchase health insurance), such an investigation could lead back to this particular tiny business and adversely affect it.

"Larger" small interests

The people more likely to be hurt are the "larger" small businesses — the well over 20,000 successful enterprises in retail, manufacturing, and service industries — virtually all of which provide health insurance and retirement plans.

Those interests are represented by the Small Business Council of America (SBCA) which had pleaded with Congress not to pass the Senate bill, whose details, they argued, "will not only harm small businesses and their ability to provide health care for their employees, but . . . lead to the ultimate demise of this country's private health care system."

SBCA CEO Peter Shanley predicted that "If health care is not funded properly by Medicare [as is widely feared under the bill], then the end result will be greater rationing of our health care system and fewer more costly options for Medicare recipients," resulting in a deterioration in "the quality and availability in health care."

No tort reform

Of course, the monstrous 2700-page Senate bill approved Sunday night in the House does not do one thing to rein in the trial lawyers. As the veteran nurse referenced above said to me, "If doctors were not so afraid that they have to have every patient have every test [for fear of incurring malpractice suits], it would take a great burden off the health care system."

Right. And where is Ralph Nader, the man who — in the name of "protecting consumers" — led this nation to its current sue-happy environment? As usual, not examining the abuse inflicted on consumers by some out-of-control elements of the tort bar, and certainly not calling for tort reform as an avenue to true health reform.

So what happens now?

Rep. Peter Hoekstra, a veteran Republican lawmaker from Michigan, can foresee a time when — if the GOP were to gain a stronger hand in the next Congress — a Republican Congress and Democrat president can work together to undo some of the damage inflicted by this new bill before it gets too far along — with the result of sensible health reform. We can only hope. Obama's left ideology would get in the way.

Process schmocess?

Republicans hoping for a comeback in 2010 could do worse than to promote a video of a comment by Rep. Alcee Hastings (D-Fla.) — the third-ranking Democrat on the House Rules Committee that reported the health "care" bill to the House floor. This gem "says it all":

"When the deal goes down, all this talk about rules — we make them up as we go along."

Given that Mr. Hastings is an impeached judge — only the sixth in the nation's history — removed from the bench on charges of corruption and perjury, we bow to the congressman on the issue of making up the rules "as we go along." Just a glimpse of the kind of sleaze that pushed this horrible bill through Capitol Hill.

© Wes Vernon

Health Reform Bill Clears Hurdle In The Senate



Health Reform Bill Clears Hurdle In The Senate CST

Obama Confuses Decades, Inflates Estimated Health Care Savings by $868B

President Obama, making his final push for health care reform, pitched his proposal Monday to a crowd in Pennsylvania with a deficit-reduction figure that the White House later admitted missed the mark.

"Our cost-cutting measures mirror most of the proposals in the current Senate bill, which reduces most people's premiums and brings down our deficit by up to $1 trillion dollars over the next decade because we're spending our health care dollars more wisely," Obama told an audience at Arcadia University in Glenside, Pa., a suburb north of Philadelphia.

Obama was so proud of these cost-saving numbers in the latest version of health care reform, he delved into a bit of Washington-speak to back them up.

"Those aren't my numbers," Obama said to the rising applause of the estimated 1,300 in attendance. "They are the savings determined by the Congressional Budget Office, which is the nonpartisan, independent referee of Congress for what things cost."


But the budget office did not say the Senate health care bill would save $1 trillion over the next decade -- or even close to that figure.

It estimated the bill would save $132 billion from 2010 to 2019, leaving Obama's "next decade" estimate $868 billion short.

When contacted about this disparity, a White House official said Obama meant to say the Senate bill would save $1 trillion in its second decade -- a projection that would more closely match congressional analysts' estimates.

The budget office, in estimating possible second-decade savings of up to $1 trillion, also cautioned against putting too much stock in figures for a period so far in the future: "A detailed year-by-year projection for years beyond 2019 ... would not be meaningful, because the uncertainties involved are simply too great."


Nevertheless, Obama is pressing Congress to act on reform measures in the face of united Republican opposition and a Democratic majority that is nervous about the upcoming midterm elections. He made the case Monday that all issues had been considered, all ideas vetted. It is time to take a stand he said.

"We have debated health care in Washington for more than a year," Obama said. "Every proposal has been put on the table. Every argument has been made. The need is great, the opportunity is here. Let's seize reform. It's within our grasp."

Healthcare Reform's Impact




Highlights of some of the more immediate impacts of the healthcare reform legislation.