| Article Check |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Business > Who is Watching the Regulators? |
|
Article Check - Who is Watching the Regulators?
The Right Financial Advisor for You eed to downsize these agencies. Apparently the FTC in our case has joined the ranks of those other agencies in their un-ethicalness. How many companies have they ruined and attacked? How many jobs have been lost? How much opportunity has been missed? How many freedoms squandered? My thoughts are if people in these agencies have that much time on their hands to surf gay porn on the internet (yes there was an article of this at the FTC in the Washington Post) and attack growing franchising companies like ours; www.CarWashGuys.com . Then obviously they cannot allot the time to real issues, which are parasites on our society, such as the Identity Theft, AdWare, Phising, SpyWare and SPAM.Financial Advisors come from varied backgrounds, wear different hats and offer vastly different services. So, that begs the question, “What makes an advisor from Merrill Lynch, or UBS, or MetLife, or another firm, big or small, different from any other?”That's a great question – one I get asked all the time. But, the question I often sense lurking well below the surface is one far more rarely asked, if ever. That question is, ... “Who is the right advisor for me and my family?”Slick slogans and fancy websites aside, one thing is sure. It's way harder than ever before to determine who's who in the financial industry and answer that question.Just a few short years ago there were clear differences between financial service firms, their representatives and the services they offered. Banks existed to help consumers save money or get loans. Stock brokers worked for wirehouses and broker/dealers and sold securities. Mutual Funds sold shares directly or through I sit here as a fan of the FTC in their endeavors to fight fraud, crime, computer issues, but as a critic to their attacks on franchising and specifically the company I have been building since age 12. There can be no excuse for these attacks, we will press on, but we can never back down to the misrepresentation and illegitimate grandstanding at the FTC, it must stop and it must stop now. “Law Enforcement experience” does not include attacking innocent companies and individuals who are dutifully exercising their right to fre Why Should You Choose A Multi-Level Marketing, Direct Selling, Home Business Opportunity? I have been doing a lot of research on regulatory bodies, including the FTC. Recently in the FTC’s report on franchising 432-pages I noticed a some discrepancies, which were contrary to my personal knowledge and observation of the agency; specifically the franchising division.Multi-Level marketing aka Direct Selling, Network Marketing, MLM is a powerful business concept for many different reason but mainly for the income it can provide the Network Marketer. It’s so power many fortune 500 companies have used this method and many have turned into multi-million dollar empires.So why can’t an average person do the same?You can! There are many average people already working great Multi-Level Marketing home based business opportunities! And the best thing is, right now is an excellent time to get started in one!Many multi-millionaires have taken note to the concept of MLM as a business model an average person can work and build significant wealth.Multi-Level Marketing is huge! It’s a thriving industry despite the negative publicity it has received from the media and those who didn’t make it. Many successful people who are now millionaires have express how the MLM business model and opportunity can be created from home and If the FTC is watching American Business, then who is watching the FTC? Some could say private sector attorneys and you can always fight the FTC, but even giants like Microsoft end up settling out of court, due to the cost of litigation these days. The FTC can take away a million or even a billion dollars of hard earned brand name value by grandstanding in the mass media and filing a case. What a complete sham? It costs too much to prove you are not guilty of violating something in the myriad of over regulation? Wow, is this the best the United States of America, the greatest nation in the world can do? Is this the best that the Federal Trade Commission, the darling of the Justice Department can do? Are you kidding me, that is it? That’s all you got? You could not be first picked on a third grade recess basketball team. Filing bogus cases and grandstanding to prove that you are doing your job and get next years budget? Why? So you can employ more people in the Beltway? The unemployment rates there are so low you cannot even get a legal citizen to come mow your lawn in Woodbridge, VA or Bethesda, MD. They even had to import the DC Sniper from the other Washington, Washington State because all the locals are too busy working to go around shooting people, well unless you are a US Marshall with road rage you open fire on a US Navy Sailor in the middle of traffic. Does the government see what is happening here? That their law enforcement officers cannot be trusted? The FBI sting just caught four congressmen. Another sting at the Arizona Border caught local police and border patrol taking bribes to look the other way during illegal drug shipments. The problems are not in the private sector, but since the FTC likes to point fingers, it is time we point back. Can the Federal Trade Commission admit their faults so we can all move forward for the betterment of country? For the betterment of franchising, the best business model ever created? The Federal Trade Commission’s law enforcement experience, if you really wish to call it that in this report, is an embarrassment to the other law enforcement agencies. Does the Federal Trade Commission have any honest law enforcement experience? If so one has to wonder. Obviously there are some pretty unethical, unstable and questionable people working in many agencies in DC. Like the FBI agent who lied to get a conviction at the Martha Stewart trial. The FBI agent who gave information to China through a sex slave, extra marital affair, girlfriend spy. How about those 13 LAPD cops who were robbing banks because they had to feed their six kids? Remember recently the hiring of the foreigner to the NJ state homeland security committee in trade for gay sex acts? And of course the Abu Grave prison sex scandal? We are always reading about Border Patrol agents like the one caught as a part of a 15-ton drug shipment, working with a trucking company? How about the most recent telling quote of Elliot Spitzer saying he is going to drive a stake through the heart of businessman he has a personal vendetta against. (Source WSJ). We know that no agency is perfect, as they are made of imperfect people, but why must the Federal Trade Commission follow suit, in such unethical practice? We need to clean up government and eliminate the fraud, there is no fraud in franchising, The Federal Trade Commission needs to look in the mirror. I cannot allow the phrase “law enforcement experience” to be used in that report, without comment, that is a clear misrepresentation of an agency which has already admitted that their purpose is to watch trends in industries and if needed file court cases to collect fees. Well if that is the method of the Federal Trade Commission then it does not need a franchising division and all the rules on the books need to be gone through and most of them eliminated. We need to reduce the franchising regulation and receive new vigor and renaissance in Franchising, not stifling and more minutia. You see law enforcement experience means nothing when you abuse the power of the law. When you manipulate data to justify your job or to help competitors in the market place which are inferior, cannot compete fairly or just lack the human capital with any real intellectual capacity to do business at the speed of thought. Promoting weakness in markets is unhealthy and to do so as part of law enforcement actions using methods of abuses of power is not what I consider law enforcement experience, it would better described as experience for the Gambino Family or Osama Bin Laden who attack freedom and free enterprise. We need to downsize these agencies. Apparently the FTC in our case has joined the ranks of those other agencies in their un-ethicalness. How many companies have they ruined and attacked? How many jobs have been lost? How much opportunity has been missed? How many freedoms squandered? My thoughts are if people in these agencies have that much time on their hands to surf gay porn on the internet (yes there was an article of this at the FTC in the Washington Post) and attack growing franchising companies like ours; www.CarWashGuys.com . Then obviously they cannot allot the time to real issues, which are parasites on our society, such as the Identity Theft, AdWare, Phising, SpyWare and SPAM. I sit here as a fan of the FTC in their endeavors to fight fraud, crime, computer issues, but as a critic to their attacks on franchising and specifically the company I have been building since age 12. There can be no excuse for these attacks, we will press on, but we can never back down to the misrepresentation and illegitimate grandstanding at the FTC, it must stop and it must stop now. “Law Enforcement experience” does not include attacking innocent companies and individuals who are dutifully exercising their right to fre Data Warehousing can employ more people in the Beltway? The unemployment rates there are so low you cannot even get a legal citizen to come mow your lawn in Woodbridge, VA or Bethesda, MD. They even had to import the DC Sniper from the other Washington, Washington State because all the locals are too busy working to go around shooting people, well unless you are a US Marshall with road rage you open fire on a US Navy Sailor in the middle of traffic. Does the government see what is happening here? That their law enforcement officers cannot be trusted? The FBI sting just caught four congressmen. Another sting at the Arizona Border caught local police and border patrol taking bribes to look the other way during illegal drug shipments. The problems are not in the private sector, but since the FTC likes to point fingers, it is time we point back.Data warehousing helps to provide information on the techniques involved in designing, building, maintaining and retrieving information, from a data warehouse. A data warehouse is premeditated and produced to support the decision-making process in an organization. The data that is obtained from the production databases are copied in the data warehouse, so that queries can be answered, without hindering the consistency of the production systems.Data warehousing includes a set of important, new concepts and tools that have evolved into a technology. This makes it possible to counter the problems involved in providing all the key information, to the concerned people.This field has evolved from the incorporation of a number of experiences and technologies, over the last two decades. Data warehousing is a well-organized and resourceful method of managing and reporting data from a variety of sources, non-uniform and scattered, throughout the company.Data ware Can the Federal Trade Commission admit their faults so we can all move forward for the betterment of country? For the betterment of franchising, the best business model ever created? The Federal Trade Commission’s law enforcement experience, if you really wish to call it that in this report, is an embarrassment to the other law enforcement agencies. Does the Federal Trade Commission have any honest law enforcement experience? If so one has to wonder. Obviously there are some pretty unethical, unstable and questionable people working in many agencies in DC. Like the FBI agent who lied to get a conviction at the Martha Stewart trial. The FBI agent who gave information to China through a sex slave, extra marital affair, girlfriend spy. How about those 13 LAPD cops who were robbing banks because they had to feed their six kids? Remember recently the hiring of the foreigner to the NJ state homeland security committee in trade for gay sex acts? And of course the Abu Grave prison sex scandal? We are always reading about Border Patrol agents like the one caught as a part of a 15-ton drug shipment, working with a trucking company? How about the most recent telling quote of Elliot Spitzer saying he is going to drive a stake through the heart of businessman he has a personal vendetta against. (Source WSJ). We know that no agency is perfect, as they are made of imperfect people, but why must the Federal Trade Commission follow suit, in such unethical practice? We need to clean up government and eliminate the fraud, there is no fraud in franchising, The Federal Trade Commission needs to look in the mirror. I cannot allow the phrase “law enforcement experience” to be used in that report, without comment, that is a clear misrepresentation of an agency which has already admitted that their purpose is to watch trends in industries and if needed file court cases to collect fees. Well if that is the method of the Federal Trade Commission then it does not need a franchising division and all the rules on the books need to be gone through and most of them eliminated. We need to reduce the franchising regulation and receive new vigor and renaissance in Franchising, not stifling and more minutia. You see law enforcement experience means nothing when you abuse the power of the law. When you manipulate data to justify your job or to help competitors in the market place which are inferior, cannot compete fairly or just lack the human capital with any real intellectual capacity to do business at the speed of thought. Promoting weakness in markets is unhealthy and to do so as part of law enforcement actions using methods of abuses of power is not what I consider law enforcement experience, it would better described as experience for the Gambino Family or Osama Bin Laden who attack freedom and free enterprise. We need to downsize these agencies. Apparently the FTC in our case has joined the ranks of those other agencies in their un-ethicalness. How many companies have they ruined and attacked? How many jobs have been lost? How much opportunity has been missed? How many freedoms squandered? My thoughts are if people in these agencies have that much time on their hands to surf gay porn on the internet (yes there was an article of this at the FTC in the Washington Post) and attack growing franchising companies like ours; www.CarWashGuys.com . Then obviously they cannot allot the time to real issues, which are parasites on our society, such as the Identity Theft, AdWare, Phising, SpyWare and SPAM. I sit here as a fan of the FTC in their endeavors to fight fraud, crime, computer issues, but as a critic to their attacks on franchising and specifically the company I have been building since age 12. There can be no excuse for these attacks, we will press on, but we can never back down to the misrepresentation and illegitimate grandstanding at the FTC, it must stop and it must stop now. “Law Enforcement experience” does not include attacking innocent companies and individuals who are dutifully exercising their right to fre Medical Billing - GU0 Record Fields 69 Through 72 ny honest law enforcement experience? If so one has to wonder.While it seems like we would never come to the end of our medical billing series on electronic billing using NSF 3.01 specifications and the GU0 record, we have finally come to the last few fields. In this installment, we introduct a new CMN field type with its own special rules for filling it out, as if things weren't complicated enough already. We pick up our review of the GU0 record with field number 69.Before we start our review of the field itself, we need to discuss the actual data type this field introduces. The previous fields for this CMN have either all been alpha numeric or numeric. This field is a percentage field. Where billers get into trouble with this field, is that it is a four position field. The reason for the extra position is because of the implied decimal point. Percentage fields are transmitted as whole numbers but if the percentage is not a whole percentage then the field is transmitted with what is called an implied decimal. For exampl Obviously there are some pretty unethical, unstable and questionable people working in many agencies in DC. Like the FBI agent who lied to get a conviction at the Martha Stewart trial. The FBI agent who gave information to China through a sex slave, extra marital affair, girlfriend spy. How about those 13 LAPD cops who were robbing banks because they had to feed their six kids? Remember recently the hiring of the foreigner to the NJ state homeland security committee in trade for gay sex acts? And of course the Abu Grave prison sex scandal? We are always reading about Border Patrol agents like the one caught as a part of a 15-ton drug shipment, working with a trucking company? How about the most recent telling quote of Elliot Spitzer saying he is going to drive a stake through the heart of businessman he has a personal vendetta against. (Source WSJ). We know that no agency is perfect, as they are made of imperfect people, but why must the Federal Trade Commission follow suit, in such unethical practice? We need to clean up government and eliminate the fraud, there is no fraud in franchising, The Federal Trade Commission needs to look in the mirror. I cannot allow the phrase “law enforcement experience” to be used in that report, without comment, that is a clear misrepresentation of an agency which has already admitted that their purpose is to watch trends in industries and if needed file court cases to collect fees. Well if that is the method of the Federal Trade Commission then it does not need a franchising division and all the rules on the books need to be gone through and most of them eliminated. We need to reduce the franchising regulation and receive new vigor and renaissance in Franchising, not stifling and more minutia. You see law enforcement experience means nothing when you abuse the power of the law. When you manipulate data to justify your job or to help competitors in the market place which are inferior, cannot compete fairly or just lack the human capital with any real intellectual capacity to do business at the speed of thought. Promoting weakness in markets is unhealthy and to do so as part of law enforcement actions using methods of abuses of power is not what I consider law enforcement experience, it would better described as experience for the Gambino Family or Osama Bin Laden who attack freedom and free enterprise. We need to downsize these agencies. Apparently the FTC in our case has joined the ranks of those other agencies in their un-ethicalness. How many companies have they ruined and attacked? How many jobs have been lost? How much opportunity has been missed? How many freedoms squandered? My thoughts are if people in these agencies have that much time on their hands to surf gay porn on the internet (yes there was an article of this at the FTC in the Washington Post) and attack growing franchising companies like ours; www.CarWashGuys.com . Then obviously they cannot allot the time to real issues, which are parasites on our society, such as the Identity Theft, AdWare, Phising, SpyWare and SPAM. I sit here as a fan of the FTC in their endeavors to fight fraud, crime, computer issues, but as a critic to their attacks on franchising and specifically the company I have been building since age 12. There can be no excuse for these attacks, we will press on, but we can never back down to the misrepresentation and illegitimate grandstanding at the FTC, it must stop and it must stop now. “Law Enforcement experience” does not include attacking innocent companies and individuals who are dutifully exercising their right to fre Don't Get Caught In The Efficiency Trap he mirror. I cannot allow the phrase “law enforcement experience” to be used in that report, without comment, that is a clear misrepresentation of an agency which has already admitted that their purpose is to watch trends in industries and if needed file court cases to collect fees. Well if that is the method of the Federal Trade Commission then it does not need a franchising division and all the rules on the books need to be gone through and most of them eliminated. We need to reduce the franchising regulation and receive new vigor and renaissance in Franchising, not stifling and more minutia.Okay, I'm going to start off by talking bad about a Toyota dealer, so before we get into it, let's make a couple of things clear. I own a Toyota Prius and love it! From what I have seen, I would probably enjoy owning almost any Toyota vehicle. However, not all Toyota dealers are created equal, and I have run into one low-life, scumbag, bait and switch dealer in North Dallas, but that has been the exception rather than the rule.The other Toyota dealers I have dealt with have all been courteous, service oriented, up to date technologically, and efficient. Therein lies the rub, as Bill Shakespeare would say. Sometimes even these great organizations get so caught up in their grand scheme of operations that they lose sight of how to do the simple things.Years ago, some coworkers and I used to have a motto of sorts. It was something like; "Work tends to expand to occupy the time and resources committed to it." That seems to be what has happened to such things You see law enforcement experience means nothing when you abuse the power of the law. When you manipulate data to justify your job or to help competitors in the market place which are inferior, cannot compete fairly or just lack the human capital with any real intellectual capacity to do business at the speed of thought. Promoting weakness in markets is unhealthy and to do so as part of law enforcement actions using methods of abuses of power is not what I consider law enforcement experience, it would better described as experience for the Gambino Family or Osama Bin Laden who attack freedom and free enterprise. We need to downsize these agencies. Apparently the FTC in our case has joined the ranks of those other agencies in their un-ethicalness. How many companies have they ruined and attacked? How many jobs have been lost? How much opportunity has been missed? How many freedoms squandered? My thoughts are if people in these agencies have that much time on their hands to surf gay porn on the internet (yes there was an article of this at the FTC in the Washington Post) and attack growing franchising companies like ours; www.CarWashGuys.com . Then obviously they cannot allot the time to real issues, which are parasites on our society, such as the Identity Theft, AdWare, Phising, SpyWare and SPAM. I sit here as a fan of the FTC in their endeavors to fight fraud, crime, computer issues, but as a critic to their attacks on franchising and specifically the company I have been building since age 12. There can be no excuse for these attacks, we will press on, but we can never back down to the misrepresentation and illegitimate grandstanding at the FTC, it must stop and it must stop now. “Law Enforcement experience” does not include attacking innocent companies and individuals who are dutifully exercising their right to fre Who Can Sue Your Business Under The ADA eed to downsize these agencies. Apparently the FTC in our case has joined the ranks of those other agencies in their un-ethicalness. How many companies have they ruined and attacked? How many jobs have been lost? How much opportunity has been missed? How many freedoms squandered? My thoughts are if people in these agencies have that much time on their hands to surf gay porn on the internet (yes there was an article of this at the FTC in the Washington Post) and attack growing franchising companies like ours; www.CarWashGuys.com . Then obviously they cannot allot the time to real issues, which are parasites on our society, such as the Identity Theft, AdWare, Phising, SpyWare and SPAM.Title III of the ADA was intended to remove barriers and make places of public accommodation for all type of individuals with disabilities and not just those that are wheel chair bound. The primary focus under the ADA is persons with physical disabilities and includes a very broad range of disabled individuals.The congressional committee reports and the Justice Department look to a comparison between a disabled person and an average person. The Justice states that a person with a disability is one whose important life activities are restricted as to the conditions, manner, or duration under which they can be performed in comparison with most people.The ADA statute defines disability as follows:The term "disability" means, with respect to an individual:(A) a physical or mental impairment that substantially limitsone or more of the major life activities of such individual;(B) a record of such an impairment; or(C) being regarde I sit here as a fan of the FTC in their endeavors to fight fraud, crime, computer issues, but as a critic to their attacks on franchising and specifically the company I have been building since age 12. There can be no excuse for these attacks, we will press on, but we can never back down to the misrepresentation and illegitimate grandstanding at the FTC, it must stop and it must stop now. “Law Enforcement experience” does not include attacking innocent companies and individuals who are dutifully exercising their right to free contract. Attacking such individuals and companies for reasons other than that which the law provides is abuse of power and therefore criminal activity. This destroys the integrity of such an agency and it slaps in the face of the reason for forming the Federal Trade Commission in the first place. It additionally undermines the entire mission of the Justice Department, which already has a black eye in the minds of the people over the prevention of 9-11 and the patriot act, which followed. If an agency cannot fulfill it’s promise it need not bother to exist, for it is a plague on civilization and a complete waste of tax payers money. My recommendation is that the words and phrase “law enforcement experience” be stricken from the franchise report and does not re-appear until which time the Federal Trade Commission has admitted it’s failures, apologized and learns what law enforcement experience is. The Federal Trade Commission has made some huge errors. Should we in fact allow them to continue to referee the franchising industry, which is so important to jobs and economic vitality in this country. Can we trust an agency, which misrepresents their experience, in this case, “law enforcement experience” to moderate and regulate franchising? It appears that in this regard the Federal Trade Commission’s Consumer Protection Division’s Franchise Rule Group may in fact be unfit to lead. The truth must be heard, there is a legal and moral obligation. If we are going to continue to regulate franchising, we must down size the regs to fit the level of oversight needed, to allow franchising to flourish. Think about it. A patriot and a gentleman always and forever,
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:A Quick Guide To Setting Up A Temporary Job Services The T-Mobile Sidekick - A Great Texting Phone Design For Banking Privacy-Agency Branch Banking
|