Friday, March 22, 2013

Clickbank Sales

Hi everyone,

You know how you said you wanted to make some extra cash from home? Well, I thought you should check this out...

http://tlkool35.easywriter.hop.clickbank.net/

The thing is, this is not some new wild scheme - it is a massive Work From Home jobs site with thousands of real work at home jobs that make you real money from home, week in, week out. It works for me...I'm sure it could work for you, too:

http://tlkool35.easywriter.hop.clickbank.net/

P.S. Just checked my account. I made another $227.47 today! If I were you, I would take a look at this right now...just click below:

http://tlkool35.easywriter.hop.clickbank.net/

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Fashion Faceoff: Jessica Biel vs. Jennifer Lopez vs. Jennifer Hudson

By | omg! – Fri, Mar 15, 2013 6:24 PM PDT

This Fashion Faceoff is going to be epic.
Any two of these three women -- Jessica Biel, Jennifer Lopez, and Jennifer Hudson -- would make for a fierce bout. However, this time we have a three-way battle between the new Mrs. Timberlake, former "American Idol" judge J.Lo, and onetime "American Idol" contestant Hudson.
Jessica Biel, Jennifer Lopez, and Jennifer Hudson (WENN/AP/Getty)
What they wore: A nude, lace, long-sleeved dress by Dolce & Gabbana.
[Related: Fashion Faceoff: Julianne Hough vs. Khloe Kardashian]
When they wore it: Biel, 31, was the first to step out in the dress at an afterparty for the Dublin premiere of her movie "Total Recall" in August. One month later, 31-year-old Hudson chose it for Hearst's 125th Anniversary Celebration in New York, and Lopez, 43, tossed it on for a January appearance on "Jimmy Kimmel Live."
[Related: Jennifer Lopez Reveals Where She Keeps That Daring Grammys Dress]
How they styled it: Biel added black pointed-toe heels and a Fendi clutch to the dress and loosely pulled back her locks. Both Lopez and Hudson went with half-up, half-down hairstyles and dangling earrings, but they differed in their choice of footwear. J.Lo slipped her feet into metallic-and-leather Christian Louboutin heels, and JHud selected sparkling pumps from Charlotte Olympia.
Judge's scorecard: "On the Floor" singer Lopez edges out the competition on shoes. When it comes to hair, though, Hudson's is, hands down, the champ. Biel's hair and shoes aren't my favorites, but how hot does she look rocking that dress? It makes me want to do calf raises immediately.
Who wins this round for you?
More Celebrity Features On Yahoo!:
Follow omg! on Twitter

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Romney in interview explains his defeat

Reuters - Former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney (L) speaks with FOX News Sunday’s Chris Wallace at his son’s home in San Diego, California for his first post-election interview in this February 28, 2013 FOX News Sunday photo. The interview airs March 3rd.

One hundred seventeen days later, Mitt Romney still isn’t over it.
Making his first public comments since losing last November’s presidential election, Romney appeared mystified still that the country didn’t see things his way. He went on the attack against President Obama during a wide-ranging interview on “Fox News Sunday,” as if the Republican hadn’t lost a beat since giving his last stump speech.
Graphic
Explore the 2012 electoral results
Click Here to View Full Graphic Story
Explore the 2012 electoral results
More from PostPolitics

Obama’s false claim of Capitol janitors receiving ‘a pay cut’

Obama’s false claim of Capitol janitors receiving ‘a pay cut’
FACT CHECKER | The president said Capitol Hill janitors were getting a pay cut. But no furloughs are planned.

Through the sequester looking glass

Through the sequester looking glass
The. Sequester. Is. Happening.

Obama’s ‘Jedi mind meld’ mixes sci-fi worlds

Obama’s ‘Jedi mind meld’ mixes sci-fi worlds
The president conflates “Star Wars” and “Star Trek” in news conference.

Furlough Friday: 10 sequester questions and answers

Furlough Friday: 10 sequester questions and answers
FEDERAL EYE | Key considerations for federal employees who may get furlough notices as soon as March 1.
Explaining the defeat, Romney and his wife spread around the blame — Mitt to Obama winning over so many blacks and Hispanics by enacting universal health care, Ann to a news media she believed unfairly caricatured her husband. Yet although Romney said “you rehearse all the mistakes that you made,” Romney mostly did not dwell on his own failings as a candidate.
Romney insisted he is getting on with his life — Fox showed him pushing some grandkids on a swing set and cradling his youngest in his arms (“No. 19 and No. 20,” he called the newborn twins) — but he revealed flashes of pain. For him, the White House forever will remain an unfulfilled destiny.
“I look at what’s happening right now, I wish I were there,” Romney said. “It kills me not to be there, not to be in the White House doing what needs to be done.”
Up until Election Day, both Mitt and Ann said, they thought they would win. “We were a little blindsided,” Ann told Fox anchor Chris Wallace. She seemed more heartbroken than her husband, saying she has cried since he lost on Nov. 6.
“You know the great ‘Princess Bride’ line, ‘Mostly dead’?” she said. “I’m mostly over it. But not completely. And you have moments where you, you know, go back and feel the sorrow of the loss. And so, yes, I think we’re not mostly dead yet.”
She added, “I know he would have been a fabulous president, and I mourn the fact that he’s not there.”
The transition from presidential nominee — life in the intoxicating and never fading spotlight, with a minute-by-minute schedule and bevies of aides, press and Secret Service agents surrounding you — to campaign has-been is always difficult. Just ask John McCain and John Kerry.
But unlike McCain and Kerry, who continued distinguished Senate careers after their failed White House bids in 2008 and 2004 respectively, Romney had no job to return to. The former Massachusetts governor tended his wounds at his San Diego beach house, largely in seclusion, making up for lost time with his family and friends.
Photographs of Romney surfaced online, including one of him pumping his own gas with his hair messed up. “None of those were done by professional photographers — or I might have, you know, combed my hair,” Romney joked to Wallace.
Romney began easing back onto the public stage with Sunday’s interview. He is scheduled to give his first speech since the election at the Conservative Political Action Conference next week.
In the Fox interview, Romney was not shy about critiquing Obama’s handling of the nation’s fiscal crises — continuing the fights that shaped the 2012 campaign.
The hardest part about losing, Romney said, has been watching “this golden moment just slip away with politics.” He accused Obama of using automatic federal spending cuts known as the sequester to score political points.

Oakland Council to Vote on Improving Political Transparency

Robert Gammon —  Sat, Mar 2, 2013 at 7:11 AM

The Oakland City Council is slated to vote Tuesday on a new law that would improve transparency during political campaigns and save the city money. The ordinance, co-sponsored by Councilwoman Libby Schaaf, City Attorney Barbara Parker, and City Clerk Latonda Simmons, would require all political candidates and committees to file their campaign finance reports electronically so that voters can go online to see who is financing political campaigns.
As the Express reported last August, the council had voted earlier last year to pay $102,000 to a private vendor, NetFile, to provide an online campaign finance reporting system to the city. But the council failed to make the system mandatory for political candidates and committees. As a result, most of them did not file their campaign finance reports electronically during the November 2012 election, thereby raising questions as to whether the $102,000 was well spent.
Libby Schaaf
  • Libby Schaaf
The non-mandatory system also ended up costing the city money, because it created more work for the City Clerk’s Office, forcing staffers to scan the paper reports and then post them online. And because the scanned reports were PDF files, they were not searchable, thus making it harder for voters to see who was financing multiple campaigns.
The proposed law also will make it easier to investigate pay-to-pay politics. Mandatory electronic filing means that campaign finance information can be downloaded into spreadsheets so that it can be compared to other database information — such as a list of government contractors.

“This ordinance will improve public access to information, modernize local government, and increase efficiency, saving valuable taxpayer dollars,” Councilwoman Libby Schaaf said in a statement. “The new format will make political contributions easy to search and analyze for the first time. This ordinance provides the public with the unfettered access to information that they deserve. It also frees up city staff from the task of filing these paper documents, so they can spend their valuable, taxpayer-funded time focused on other essential services.”