PFT: NFL suspends Gaffney 2 days after release

Atlanta Falcons v Philadelphia EaglesGetty Images

When Nnamdi Asomugha was a younger man, he?d get upset at players he saw on television, the ones he thought were underperforming.

So he?s not going to badmouth Eagles fans who have targeted him the same way.

?If a fan has an issue with that, they?re not going to get me saying that?s wrong or anything like that,? Asomugha said, via Reuben Frank of CSNPhilly.com. ?I can look back to being a fan and teams I liked and when a player I like comes in and, . . . it?s not working out, being upset about that.

?So I can?t now be that guy and then look at them and say, ?You can?t be upset that we haven?t won and I haven?t been, you know, Superman on the field,? even though that?s been expected of me.?

The cornerback has become the very symbol of the Eagles current woes, signing a five-year, $60 million contract to become part of the Dream Team, and struggling just like the rest of them once he got there. He?s been part of a team that?s gone 11-15 since he walked in the door, far below expectations.

That?s hard anywhere, but in Philadelphia, the heat is a little higher than in other places.

?It?s tough,? he said. ?That?s one of the things they say, . . . Mentally, how do you handle this sort of situation? Not just the losing, but losing in this environment. Because losing is different here.

?No one wants to lose. You want to win everything that you?re doing, but as they?ve pointed out, as we all know, you?ve got to win here. You just have to win here.

?So I get that question a lot from younger guys, and I just try to talk to them, keep their head in it. When you believe in yourself and believe in your team no matter what?s going on, I?m one of the people that believes it turns around at some point.?

Of course, when it does turn around, it?s likely to include a new coach, and it?s far from guaranteed it will include a 33-year-old corner who?s scheduled to make $15 million next year. But he doesn?t second-guess his decision to sign with the Eagles.

?Did I make the right decision? Should I have gone somewhere else? That doesn?t cross my mind at all,? he said. ?This is the place I wanted to be. Whatever happens or has happened, I always have the mindset that there?s something to learn from it and there?s a way to grow.

?And I think especially with what we?ve been through, the type of stuff we?ve been through the last year and a half, what did you learn from it? How can you become a better man from it? That?s going to help you on the field. That?s always been my mentality. I absolutely believe in the decision that I made and believe in this team.

?I don?t even think about that stuff. Whatever happens, I?m built to deal with that situation. Honestly? Being as honest as I can be? It doesn?t go through my mind.?

It?s going through many others, however, and they?re rightly wondering if it was all worth it.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/11/24/report-jabar-gaffney-suspended-by-league-after-release/related/

king arthur king arthur there will be blood there will be blood nigel barker 420 secret service

Build Google's Linear Book Scanner Prototype

Build Google's Linear Book Scanner Prototype If digitizing a historic collection of books is important to you or your local historical society or library you can purchase a commercial book scanner for around a hundred thousand dollars or make the DIY prototype version from Google books using a vacuum cleaner, a scanner, and other components totalling around $1500.

While this definitely isn't a project for everyone, it would be a great way for a local makerspace to build social capital with libraries and other institutions by making the scanner available for preserving important local and historical works. The linear scanner is designed to not damage the book, using vacuum suction to turn the pages. The source link below has both a PDF design document and a software clone.

linear books scanner | Google Code via The How-To Geek

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/zO5Q8Al1Kqs/build-googles-linear-book-scanner-prototype

kansas ohio state wrestlemania results womens final four josh hutcherson google april fools office space shell houston open

College Textbook Industry Gets Disruptive Shock from Internet - Col ...

The internet may shake up the traditional collegiate business model beyond creating online degree and certification programs.

Via Instapundit: In Technology Review, Michael Fitzgerald reports on an innovate approach to make digital versions of expensive textbooks available to cost-conscious students.

Ask Ariel Diaz why he?s taking on the college textbook industry and he?ll tell you, ?Quaternions.?

Quaternions are a number system used for calculating three-dimensional motion, popular in computer graphics. And Diaz needed a crash course to help him with a consulting gig after his online video platform startup, Youcastr, had failed. He started with Wikipedia and found it was surprisingly good at explaining this complicated mathematics.

Diaz, who still resents how much he?d paid for textbooks in college and graduate school, realized he?d hit on his next business idea. In 2011, he started Boundless Learning, a Boston company that has begun giving away free electronic textbooks covering college subjects like American history, anatomy and physiology, economics, and psychology.

What?s controversial is how Boundless creates these texts. The company trawls for public material on sites like Wikipedia and then crafts it into online books whose chapters track closely to those of top-selling college titles. In April, Boundless was sued by several large publishers who accused the startup of engaging in ?the business model of theft.?

Theft or not, the college textbook industry is ripe for a disruptive shock from the Internet. Publishers today operate using what Mark Perry, a professor at the University of Michigan, calls a ?cartel-style? model: students are required to buy specific texts at high prices. Perry has calculated that prices for textbooks have been rising at three times the rate of inflation since the 1980s.

On average, college students spend around $1,200 each year on books and supplies. Those costs, which sometimes exceed the tuition at a community college, are prompting a wider rebellion against commercial publishers. In February, California legislators passed a law directing the state to produce free versions of texts used in the state?s 50 most popular college courses. In October, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said printed textbooks, a $6 billion industry in the United States (when sales of both used and new books are tallied), should be made ?obsolete.?

Unlike publishers, who market their books to professors, Diaz?s company is aiming directly at students. Starting in the summer of 2011, Boundless sent marketers to hand out flyers on four campuses, including Boston University and Florida State University. Diaz says that within weeks the company had students signing up from 1,000 campuses, although he declines to say how many students have downloaded Boundless textbooks.

In their lawsuit, filed in March, publishers Cengage Learning, Pearson Education, and MacMillan Higher Education accused Boundless of copyright infringement, false advertising, and unfair competition. Diaz denies all the charges. He says his company uses only public information and doesn?t actually make or sell textbooks. ?We don?t look at ourselves as an e-book or an online textbook or even textbook 2.0,? he says. ?We see it as how do you create the next-generation content platform, which is much more than a textbook.?

In the case of Mankiw?s Principles, Boundless offers a stripped-down text covering the same core economic concepts. Mankiw is a snappy writer who starts off his chapter on taxes with an anecdote about Al Capone. Boundless?s version reads more like a reference text, but its organization closely apes that of Mankiw?s. Both have 36 chapters and even share the same first sentence: ?The word economy comes from the Greek word oikonomos, which means one who manages a household.?

Boundless?s replacement books are appealing to students like Heather Haygood, in her third year at Pikes Peak Community College in Colorado Springs, Colorado. She is using the Boundless version of Biology, which her school sells for $178. ?I just refuse to spend that much on a book,? Haygood said in an e-mail interview. ?It?s a known fact that college kids are generally poor/broke so why are you charging us so much for books??? ? lucky me i found it for free!!? She calls the Boundless edition a ?pretty dead-on? copy.

Source: http://collegeinsurrection.com/2012/11/college-textbook-industry-gets-disruptive-shock-from-internet/

Arlen Specter Winsor McCay Amanda Todd washington nationals Gary Collins bus driver uppercut Argo

Thanksgiving movies offer a tasty buffet

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

There've been a lot of reports this week about store employees whose Thanksgivings are being cut short so they can work Thanksgiving night. Where's the love for the movie theater employees, though, who will sacrifice turkey-nap time so they can pop the corn, rip the tickets and tell you to "enjoy the show" once more and with feeling? (Except for "John Carter." No one can enjoy that turkey.)

MGM/Sony, 20th Century Fox, Disney

Your Thanksgiving movie menu is varied this year. "Skyfall"? "Life of Pi"? "Wreck-It Ralph"? "Lincoln"?

For some, turkey-trotting over to the cinema on Thanksgiving is an American tradition as great as Grandma's pumpkin pie recipe. But you want to make that theater time count. Here's our movie editor's guide to what to see, and with whom.

TOP PICK
'Skyfall'
For a while, it looks as if super-spy James Bond might have been shaken, stirred and stuck on a shelf. Thanks to MGM's bankruptcy woes, "Skyfall" was trapped in limbo tighter than a Bond girl's cocktail dress. But "Skyfall" finally hit theaters this month, and if you haven't seen it, ?you need to. Exotic locations (Turkey, Macau!), thrilling action sequences (includng one on a train!), spy versus spy intrigue, Bond family history, gadgets and more. Former Bond Sir Roger Moore himself told NBC News.com that after he saw the film, he emailed Bond producer Barbara Broccoli and told her she'd saved the franchise for another 50 years.
Review: 'Skyfall' is a spectacular way for Bond to turn 50?

TAKE THE KIDS
Older kids (5 and over): 'Wreck-It Ralph'
Parents whose 1980s memories are sharp enough that they still can mentally move Pac-Man through that maze will love "Wreck-It Ralph," but kids will enjoy it too. Bad-guy Ralph escapes his game in a quest to be a hero. Parents of tiny tots should know there's a foray into a first-person shooter game -- filled with creepy cy-bugs -- which might overwhelm the littlest ones.
REVIEW: Visually dazzling 'Wreck-It Ralph' scores high?

Younger kids: 'Rise of the Guardians'
Sure, Santa, the Easter Bunny, the Sandman and the Tooth Fairy fight evil together. Why not? In this enchanting new 3-D film, they enlist young Jack Frost to help them battle Pitch, a giver of bad dreams. Like "Wreck-It Ralph," this one's also PG, as Pitch and his swirling black nightmare horses might deliver a bad dream themselves. But my preschooler was enchanted more than disturbed.
REVIEW: 'Rise of the Guardians' is a charming holiday tale?

FOR HISTORY BUFFS
If you like modern history: 'Argo'
Those 1970s mustaches! The dial phones! It's the late 1970s all right, and the wonderful "Argo" thrusts you right back there as the Iranian Hostage Crisis grips the nation. But instead of focusing on the 52 hostages who were held for 444 days, the film hones in on a lesser-known event, the rescue of?six embassy employees using a fascinating cover story claiming they were Canadians scouting locations for a science-fiction movie. The outstanding cast (Ben Affleck, John Goodman, Bryan Cranston, Alan Arkin) appeals to all generations.
REVIEW: 'Argo' offers tight political thriller with unexpected humor?

If you prefer the older stuff: 'Lincoln'
You should know going in: Steven Spielberg's "Lincoln" is not a battle film. But you never feel it lacks for action, as the president and his men work every conceivable angle to lobby enough congressmen to vote to abolish slavery. ?Daniel Day-Lewis gives us perhaps the most accurate portrayal possible of the great man himself, mixing leadership with his own patented blend of homespun storytelling. (Don't miss the anecdote about George Washington's picture in a British bathroom.) You'll see Day-Lewis' name come Oscar time.
REVIEW: 'Lincoln' makes backroom politics fascinating?

FOR BOOK LOVERS:
If you prefer modern fiction: 'Life of Pi'
Book clubbers, you remember reading this. Yann Martel's 2001 bestseller-turned-movie tells the fantastical tale of Pi Patel, an Indian boy who finds himself at sea in a lifeboat with some very hungry zoo animals, including a Bengal tiger named Richard Parker. If you're the kind of moviegoer who needs everything to feel realistic and explainable, this is perhaps not the film for you. But if you're willing to suspend belief, director Ang Lee has spun a wonderful 3-D fable that doesn't require you to read the book.
REVIEW: 'Life of Pi' a gorgeous rendering of best-selling novel

If you love romantic classics: 'Anna Karenina'
Maybe you read it in a college literature course, or maybe you just know the title in case it's ever a question on "Jeopardy!." There's a reason Leo Tolstoy's "Anna Karenina" has been made into a movie a dozen times -- its tale of a 19th century Russian wife and the way she stumbles into doom when she has an affair is riveting. In this version, Keira Knightley spellbinds as Anna, and director Joe Wright's imaginative, stylish take gives an old story a new twist.
REVIEW: 'Anna Karenina' is a bold adaptation of classic novel?

FOR RETRO NUTS:
Stuck in the 1980s: 'Red Dawn'
We're not convinced anyone was really begging for a remake of the 1984 Russian invasion drama "Red Dawn," but here it is. This time, the Russians aren't the enemy, it's the North Koreans, who were hastily painted in when filmmakers decided not to risk offending their first choice, the Chinese. But if you're well into the eggnog, grab those pals who knew you back when you wore leg warmers and shoulder pads, and relive those cheesy old lines you screamed back in the day. WOLVERINES! AVENGE ME!
REVIEW: 'Red Dawn' remake makes silly premise even dumber?

Longing for the 1960s: 'Hitchcock'
No, you can't take the carving knife to your pompous Uncle Henry at Thanksgiving dinner. But?you can take him, and any film buffs at your table, to watch that knife famously used in the "Psycho" shower scene in the new biopic "Hitchcock." Anthony Hopkins plays the legendary director as he battles to get the 1960 film made, with Helen Mirren as Alma, his wife and muse. You may have to hunt around for this film, as it's more likely to be found in arthouse theaters than megamall cineplexes.
REVIEW: 'Hitchcock' takes absorbing look at famed director?

Gael Fashingbauer Cooper is the movies editor for NBCNews.com and the co-author of "Whatever Happened to Pudding Pops? The Lost Toys, Tastes and Trends of the '70s and '80s."

Related content:

Source: http://entertainment.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/21/15336211-thanksgiving-movies-offer-a-tasty-buffet?lite

katy perry Chad Johnson Twitter Helen Gurley Brown Kathi Goertzen Johnny Pesky spice girls justin theroux

Funnybone Toys Review & Giveaway (US) - Simply Stacie

If you are searching for fun, smart card games for ages 8 and up then I highly recommend two games from Funnybone Toys. My family and I have had a blast playing both Array and Spectrix and even though my children are a bit younger than the recommended ages they still have a blast playing these games with a bit of help from mom and dad during game time. In fact, my two younger children are very drawn to the bright, colorful graphics and have made up their own game rules occupying themselves in game play for hours at a time. Proudly sold in many museum gift stores, award-winning Funnybone Toys promote creativity, friendly competition and it proves that ?brainy? games can be lots of fun too!

Funnybone Toys Card Games

Array (SRP $14.99) is a card game featuring playing cards that are beautifully designed with the most vivid colors, hue and patterns that is truly a work of art. When I introduced this game to my children there were ?oh?s and ah?s? and they were very excited to learn how to play. Players get ready to ?splatter? and ?slam? their cards as they slice and splice their opponents out of the game on their way to victory. The written instructions are easy to understand and the game is so much fun for children and adults alike.

Funnybone Toys Card Games

Are you curious to see how to play Array? Check out this short video demonstration.

Spectrix ($14.99) is an equally visually stunning and colorful twist on my favorite class card game, Rummy. My husband and I enjoy playing this card game together to unwind when the kids are tucked into bed and we love having a friendly competition. The goal is to be the first person to use all the cards in your hand. Each game is a beautiful display of color sequences and patterns.

Both of these award-winning games from Funnybone Toys are so appealing and I plan to display on our coffee table for play with family and friends during the holidays. Each of these games would be a great stocking stuffer or gift idea for kids and grown-ups. The games are quite attractively priced and budget friendly and it is sure to be a hit!

I am so pleased to introduce you to this new game company that has already won the Creative Child?s Game of the Year award. You are invited to visit Funnybone Toys to browse all three games in the collection. Array, Spectrix and Classic CUBU are available for purchase at Barnes and Noble stores nationwide as well as additional retailers which can be located from their website. Which one is your favorite?

Giveaway

One lucky reader will receive your choice of one game from Funnybone Toys either Array, Spectrix or Classic CUBU!

Funnybone Toys Card Games

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Check out the list of all my?current giveaways!

Disclosure: I was not financially compensated for this post. I received a sample of the product for review purposes. The opinions are my own, based on my personal experience with the product.

Holiday Gift Guide

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger... -->

Source: http://www.simplystacie.net/2012/11/funnybone-toys/

rubio colts colts big ten tournament 2012 dennis quaid bruce weber fired notorious big

Amazon Instant Video is live on the Nintendo Wii U

Amazon Instant Video is live on Nintendo Wii U

When the Wii U launched we were disappointed that not all of its promised streaming video services were available, but today the last one, Amazon Instant Video, has been turned on. It includes access to Prime subscription video, Whispersync bookmarks from other devices, watchlists and has the ability to rent or purchase VOD directly from the console. Like the Hulu and Netflix apps, it also includes second screen integration with the GamePad controller with video playback, browsing content or playback control of what's on the TV. Owners can hit the source link for more information on how to activate it on their box or check after the break for the full press release.

Continue reading Amazon Instant Video is live on the Nintendo Wii U

Filed under: , , , ,

Comments

Source: Amazon

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/21/wii-u-amazon-instant-video/

daylight savings time 2012 Where To Vote notre dame football james harden breeders cup Mitch Lucker Red Cross

No. 5 Duke manhandles Minnesota, 89-71

Duke forward Mason Plumlee (5) and Minnesota guard Austin Hollins (20) fight for a loose ball in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game at the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012, in Paradise Island, Bahamas. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Duke forward Mason Plumlee (5) and Minnesota guard Austin Hollins (20) fight for a loose ball in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game at the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012, in Paradise Island, Bahamas. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Duke forward Mason Plumlee (5) scores as Minnesota's Andre Hollins (1) and Elliott Eliason (55) defend during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game at the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012, in Paradise Island, Bahamas. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Duke guard Quinn Cook (2) drives to the basket as Minnesota forward Rodney Williams Jr. (33) defends during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game at the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012, in Paradise Island, Bahamas. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

(AP) ? Seth Curry scored 25 points and Mason Plumlee added 20 points and a career-high-matching 17 rebounds as No. 5 Duke's starters scored all but two of the Blue Devils' points in an 89-71 victory over Minnesota on Thursday in the first round of the Battle 4 Atlantis.

Plumlee was coming off a career-high 28 points on 9-for-11 shooting from the field, 10 of 11 from the free throw line and had nine rebounds in the Blue Devils' previous game, an 88-67 win over Florida Gulf Coast.

Sophomore point guard Quinn Cook had a career-high 17 points for the Blue Devils who extended their regular-season tournament winning streak to 21 games, a run that stretches to the championship game of the 2006 CBE Classic.

Duke (4-0) will face the winner of the first-round game between No. 19 Memphis and VCU in Friday's semifinals.

Rodney Williams had 16 points for the Golden Gophers (4-1), who just couldn't cut into the Blue Devils' lead in the second half.

Duke's lead ranged from 10 to 13 points throughout most of the second half. Minnesota, a team known for its toughness and defense, met its match in the Blue Devils, who were just as physical as the Gophers, and were more so through the last 5 minutes when Duke pulled away.

Ryan Kelly had 14 points for Duke and freshman Rasheed Sulaimon, the fifth starter, added 11. The only points scored by a non-starter were the two from Amile Jefferson.

Curry was 8 of 11 from the field and Duke finished 30 of 55 (54.5 percent). Curry made all three of his 3-point attempts and the Blue Devils were 8 of 10 from beyond the arc.

Minnesota had held its first three opponents to 28.6 shooting from the field and 19.1 percent on 3s while giving up 48.0 points per game.

Obviously Duke was a little bit better than the Gophers' first three opponents.

This was Duke's 150th consecutive game ranked in the Top Ten and the Blue Devils are 150-30 in those games.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-11-22-T25-Minnesota-Duke/id-c98aad9279614e4794381c183daa8387

invincible jesse jackson whitney houston funeral video tyler perry whitney houston r kelly r. kelly macular degeneration

Samsung to outline 8-core big.LITTLE ARM processor in February

Samsung to demo 8core bigLITTLE ARM processor in February, usher in heterogeneous mobile chips

Samsung's processor design team has been on a roll with fast chips this year with the Exynos 4 Quad and Exynos 5 Dual. Based on its agenda for the International Solid-State Circuits Conference, that momentum isn't about to stop. A company presentation at the event on February 19th will delve into a new heterogeneous, 8-core processor that relies on ARM's concept of big.LITTLE computing: one half is a quad-core, 1.8GHz ARM Cortex-A15 that will do all the heavy lifting, while the other is a quad 1.2GHz Cortex-A7 that takes over in quieter moments. We don't know much more about the chip beyond the expected 28-nanometer manufacturing process, but it's easy to see a mobile chip that's fast without having to consume much energy in its downtime. Most of the mystery surrounds where Samsung will launch the processor first, rather than what it can do: the big.LITTLE chip would be most valuable in a smartphone, but a potentially large size could relegate it to tablets early on.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Via: EETimes, GSMArena

Source: ISSCC (PDF)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/20/samsung-to-outline-8-core-big-little-arm-processor-in-february/

Andy Griffith joe johnson scientology Wimbledon 2012 TV Schedule anderson cooper fourth of july Jason Terry

Video Q&A Site VYou Adds Twitter Mentions To Let Users Respond To Tweets Via Video

vyou_logoVYou has built a community around question-and-answer type interactions via video, both on the web and through mobile apps. Now users can see and respond to questions on Twitter. The new feature allows Twitter users to see either their Twitter stream, or just mentions, and record video responses to them. Those video replies are then posted both on VYou, and tweeted out to their Twitter followers.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/hgEweb6rkd8/

bobby valentine bobby valentine nicki minaj miguel cabrera Karrueche Tran dodd frank Lark Voorhies

Tax Facts | ZeroHedge

?

I took a look at the history of taxes in the USA. A few interesting (to me) factoids. The data comes from the Tax Policy Center (Link); the graphs are mine.

?

I?ve never been convinced that comparisons of the Depression, to today?s economic conditions, are valid. It was a different economy back then, with a much smaller government. Consider the following that plots taxation as a percent of GDP during the 1930s and 2008-12.

?

?

It took a world war to end the Depression, and that period was marked with very low taxes. People argue that taxes are too low today, maybe, but they are already 6Xs what they were the last time the SHTF.

?

?

I think the ?modern economy? started around 1950. By then, the distortions from the Depression and WWII were unwinding. In addition, Social Security taxation became a meaningful percent of total individual taxation. The following charts look at the components of taxation from 1950 ? 2012; the information is presented by President, the tax rates are the average for the respective tenure:

?

?

?

?

Some observations looking at this:

?

- I?ve read the arguments that tax rates in the 50?s were very high and the economy did just fine. Not true at all.

?

- The Clinton years are also pointed to as a period where income tax rates were high, and the economy did very well. This is appears to be correct. Marginal tax rates were higher; this contributed to the increase in total tax revenues. In addition, the capital gains that were generated in the late stages of the DotCom boom supported revenues. The bump in income taxes in 2000 was attributable to a hot stock market.

?

?

?

- The Obama years are marked with low tax receipts as a percent of GDP. The reasons for the drop include: (1) The recession and the drop in payrolls. (2) Losses from investments (houses and stocks) (3) The 2% reduction in Payroll taxes.

?

Corporate tax rates are at historically low levels today. The persistent argument from corporate America is that tax rates are a too high, and must be lowered if America is to compete in the global economy. There is some truth to this argument. The statutory corporate rate is 35%, but very few companies pay this rate.

?

?

?

Federal excise taxes, as a percent of the economy, are at historical low levels today. This is, primarily, the gas tax.

?

?

I don?t ?like? any taxes, but some tax revenue is necessary. I particularly hate all income taxes. I favor taxes on consumption, not wages. If the excise taxes the government collects were doubled to equal 1% of GDP, it would generate $1T+ over the next ten-years. Much more than either of the Bush tax cuts that are now up for discussion.

After looking at these charts I conclude:

?

- Social Security taxes impose a very heavy burden on the economy.

- Income tax revenues are low today because of the economy, not the marginal tax rates. Consider the fall off during the past four years versus the Bush era. Marginal tax rates were the same, but tax revenue, as a percent of the economy, fell. It's the economy, not the tax rates that are the problem. D.C. is focused on the wrong issue.

- It's well past time that a redo of corporate taxation is made. The system is busted. The end result should be a much lower marginal tax rate to insure competitiveness, but also a minimum tax rate that also insures some fairness, and higher net tax receipts.

- Excise taxes have to go up. Sorry.

?

?

?

Your rating: None Average: 3.9 (10 votes)

Source: http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed/2012-11-20/tax-facts

john dillinger carlos zambrano clemson pellet gun clay aiken zambrano orange bowl