|
however, according to bukiewicz, outsiders hired by the
charitable arm of the church are protected by non-discrimination policies
which include sexual orientation but prohibit employees and clients from
"recruiting others to any particular lifestyle. |
| a lot of it centers around your
> social security number, which by law only the social security
> administration is allowed to use, but in actuality is used all over the
> place by all sorts of government agencies and private companies. with this number and a few other relatively easy to obtain details about
> somebody, like their birthday, it is fairly easy to steal their identity
> and open accounts in their name and generally create a huge mess for them which takes years to clear up.
> i see this problem just getting
> worse with a national identity card, especially if that card contains
> some sort of chip that holds huge amounts of personal details about the
> person. |
| it sort of becomes one stop shopping for a would be thief.
if the information is held on the card rather than on a central
database, then just knowing the id number wouldn't get you far. please keep replies on the 'group where everyone may benefit. please keep replies on the 'group where everyone may benefit.but personally, i can't stand viewings, they sure as
hell have never made *me* feel any better! funeral services, if they have a
bit of lightheartedness to them, are a different story. |
|
i know this, i give my old cell phones to my nieces and nephews of driving
age for emergency use. you're not willing to
>>entertain any explanation that contradicts your thinking.except for home grown criminals and terrorists. bush and congress
> completely removed all funding for project safe neighborhood", a program
> designed to crack down on gun trafficking and gun-related crimes. |
| they also
> pulled funding for a program to track and intercept illegal purchases of
> guns by youths. all because "it's a matter of priorities and a lean budget".com
"the work goes on, the cause endures, the hope still lives and the dream
will never die.com
"the work goes on, the cause endures, the hope still lives and the dream
will never die.
>
> instead of saying to the society for the protection of star-faced moles,
> "sure, we let the salvation army accept donations on our property.except for home grown criminals and terrorists. they also pulled funding for a program to
> > track and intercept illegal purchases of guns by youths. the nra was in favor of the programs --- the article quoted an nra
official saying so (since when has the nra argued criminals should have
equal access to guns?). |
>
> for once you have your facts straight -- that tax nearly ruined almost every
> industry along the chesapeake bay. none of the local boat manufacturers came
> back after the tax was repealed -- and it wasn't applied just to yachts" --
> plenty of reasonably average powerboats were covered by that law too. it's real easy to get a
cruiser to cost more than $100k when you start adding anemnities like
electronics and whatnot.i'll have to see if there's a goodwill donation center around
here.i'd want a receipt for tax purposes, and one of those drop-box
dumpsters wouldn't be too good for dropping off a barely used dress suit
anyway. already, many smaller
municipalities without good broadband alternatives have installed wi-fi
clouds over their city centers.
but that plan looked to be derailed by the passage of a telecommunications
bill by the pennsylvania legislature that essentially nixed public networks
as unfair competition for local telcos. a public outcry over that proviso
led to compromise that gives local phone companies first right of refusal
on supplying such services. and this week, verizon came to with
the city of that gives up its right under the new
law, leaving the way clear for 's plans. |
|
while the philadelphia drama played out under wide public scrutiny, other
states are to similar laws restricting municipal competition
with communications suppliers, to detriment of users.. .. |