Primus - to defy laws of tradition (videoplasty)

great video with introduccion of the videoplasty

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Laws?

If You could institute a new law, what would it be?
What law would you change/abolish of current laws.
In the U.S that is.

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Are there any laws in California concerning renting churches?

I’m planning on having a concert where we have admission fees and then sell concessions. I’m not sure if there are any laws about any of this, I don’t want to do anything illegal.

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The Nanny 6×11-The In-laws who came part 2

Aunt Freida buys Sylvia and Mortie’s apartment building, and promptly kicks them out, forcing Fran to take them in at the Sheffield residence!!!!!!!

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How to Resolve Dallas Family Law Matters Peacefully and Quickly

How to Resolve Dallas Family Law Matters Peacefully and Quickly

Resolving family law disputes related to divorce, child custody, child protective services, adoption and the like is not easy. Amicable and mutually agreeable resolution of family disputes requires adequate legal knowledge and experience of Dallas family law.. If you are caught up in a family law matter, it is crucial to avail the services of a first-class Dallas family attorney or law firm.

A reputable Dallas family attorney will have thorough knowledge of the legal proceedings that are part of family law. In the capacity of a legal representative, a Dallas family lawyer would help you prepare and submit the necessary legal documents required in the Dallas court, build your case, present it before the judiciary body and achieve a desirable resolution.

Professional and experienced Dallas family firms provide sound legal representation in all types of family law matters. In the case of divorce, your divorce attorney would help you deal with all the issues related to divorce, such as characterization and valuation of marital assets, property division, reimbursement claims, spousal support, child custody and issuance of restraining orders.

Leading Dallas divorce lawyers are trained in all family law approaches namely courtroom litigation, collaborative divorce law, and mediation. Divorce matters are resolved mostly by the parties’ voluntary agreement, through the assistance of a mediator, and at times after a court trial.

Other family law matters resolved by reputable Dallas family lawyers include:

Child custody disputes, including emergency restraining orders, parenting plan development, custody trials, child support and visitation orders, and modification of pre-existing custody and support orders.

Rights of grandparents and extended family members, including advocation for any family members who may have rights to visitation or custody.

Child Protective Services cases, including defence of claims for child abuse or neglect, appeal of CPS abuse findings, home study disputes, foster parent interventions, foster home placement disputes and termination of parental rights defense.

Adoption, including adoptions by step-parents and extended family, agreed adoptions, relinquishment of parental rights and open adoptions.

To take the example of child protective services, if you need to protect your child and yourself from CPS investigation, seek the services of a reputable CPS attorney at a well-regarded Dallas family law firm. Such lawyers have a thorough understanding of the CPS system and know how to create a balance between the interest of CPS workers who are striving for the safety of the child and that of the parents who wish to maintain custody of their offspring.

Schreier &Housewirth is a leading Fort Worth family law firm with over 35 years of experience in Dallas divorce cases and other family law cases related to child custody, child support and property and debt division.

If you are looking for a reputable Dallas divorce lawyer or Dallas family attorney for a speedy and effective resolution of your family dispute, visit www.lawtolife.com and employ the service of the most competent Dallas lawyers.

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Limbo and Home Loan Modifications by Feldman Law Center

Feldman Law Center - As the foreclosure backlog grows, a new class of American homeowners as described by a recent article in the Washington Post is growing by the month. These are homeowners that have fallen into a financial limbo where they are badly behind on payments, but their lenders have not yet foreclosed on the home. “I have even begged them for a foreclosure,” delinquent mortgage-holder Charlotte Jensen said. Behind on payments and not willing to wait for an eviction notice, she filed for bankruptcy, and left the home. Nearly a year later, still with no further payments, Bank of America has yet to take back the home.

The total of the backlog is estimated at one million borrowers, sits on top of the one million foreclosure actions that had been taken this year through May. It presents a major obstacle for any kind of rebound or stability in the country’s hard hit real estate markets. It’s also an obstacle than can drive the market lower and then keep it there indefinitely. Banks are currently doing the best they can not to flood the market with foreclosures but each sale, when one occurs, is counted as a “comp” for appraisal purposes. Everything similar gets indexed to the comp until the next sells at a lower price. For evidence of properties being kept off of the market one need only look at one of highest foreclosure states in the country. California had 111,000 foreclosed properties which could have gone to auction in May. Of that number, only 17,000 went to auction and only 2,000 sold. If those kinds of numbers repeat for just a few months, the state will have a backlog that will take years to unwind. Properties that aren’t sold on the way down would most likely be sold as prices stabilize or start to bounce back, which would mute any recovery.

“Lenders are having an immensely difficult time handling the capacity. They are torn between loan modification, short sales, foreclosures, and they are finding they can’t do all these things at once, and do them well, so we’re seeing a lot of things falling through the cracks,” said Howard Glaser, a housing industry consultant and a housing official during the Clinton administration.

Mortgage lenders and investors in that scenario would be looking at more losses as a result of the mortgage crisis. “It just means foreclosure rates are going to keep rising,” said Patrick Newport, an economist for IHS Global Insight. Without an end to the downward spiral in prices any kind of meaningful recovery in the economy will be impossible.

Another issue is the growing conflict of interest between mortgage investors and the companies that service the loans for them. In many cases, what is good for the servicers is bad for the investors and vice versa. For instance, in a home loan modification versus foreclosure situation, the servicer will favor the modification because it keeps payments and fees they can charge on them alive. The mortgage investors, seeing the potential for a decrease in cash flow as a result of the modification, will favor foreclosure as a means of getting their money out of the deal. The resulting stalemate can cause a house to sit in limbo while the servicers and lenders decide a course of action. For the homeowners in the situation, the stalemate can be beneficial as it allows them to stay in the house but the stress of knowing that an eviction can come at any time is tough to deal with.

While some of the backlog reflects the inability of lenders to keep up with the sheer volume of delinquent properties, another reason is an intentional slowdown in the pace of foreclosures as government and industry try to work with borrowers who want to stay in their homes. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-run mortgage financing companies, put a temporary moratorium on foreclosures late last year, some states imposed moratoriums, and many of the country’s largest lenders voluntarily participated as well. The extra time gave lenders time to see how the guidelines of the Obama Administration’s “Making Home Affordable” would work and which borrowers could be helped by modifying their current mortgages under the plan. Many of those moratoriums started expiring at the end of the first quarter of this year, and foreclosures have been setting records on a monthly basis since then.

With potentially millions of foreclosed homes on the market and more coming every day, Prices have been hit across the country. The prices for existing homes fell another 16% in May versus the prices one year prior. The growing backlog of homes in limbo indicates that foreclosure rates are likely to increase dramatically during the second half of this year and into 2010. Some estimates are calling for foreclosures to reach 2.4 million by year end. Bob Bellack, chairman of Zetabid, which auctions foreclosed properties, said “Prices will fall to the point where you have equilibrium, and it won’t reach that until there is no longer this foreclosure overhang.”

Financial firms that carry mortgages or mortgage-backed securities on their books are scrambling to stem past and anticipated losses with any means possible. Whether a sign of desperation or not, mortgage investors have thrown their support behind the Hope for Homeowners plan, a leftover from the Bush Administration which was considered an absolute flop the first time around. Intended to help over 400,000 homeowners at its outset, the plan originated only one loan. If the economy doesn’t turn, and without some sort of government assistance, continued foreclosures will result in continuing rounds of losses for investors.

Being in limbo has allowed some homeowners the time to save money while not making mortgage payments and take action through the home loan modification process to save their homes from foreclosure. In general, however, statistics don’t bode well for homeowners once they start missing payments. According to a March report from NeighborWorks America, a large housing counseling group, 60 percent of homeowners go into foreclosure after missing more than four payments.

Normal protocol is for the foreclosure process to start after the third payment has been missed but now it’s common for a foreclosure process to take nine months or more to get started, said Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance. “No one is in a rush, lender-wise, to deal with the property,” he said. “If you have to sell at a loss, why rush?”

Another protocol has lenders writing down the value of the home six months after an owner stops making payments, but the total loss is not recorded until the property is sold in foreclosure, said Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Economy.com. “Some may feel that the property is worth more than the market can bear at this time, and they are willing to wait until the market improves”, he said. “They don’t want to sell it into a completely depressed market.”

The typical foreclosure process varies by state and has been slowed down by the constant incoming volume. The timeline of the process is also dependent on who actually owns the mortgage and whether a bankruptcy has been filed by the homeowner. One of the biggest issues in the process now is that the phase preceding eviction, sale at auction, isn’t happening. Lenders, considering their workload and the costs of each foreclosure, aren’t eager to start a process which isn’t likely to be seen through to completion so limbo is the next best option.

“During that period, where the property is in limbo, until there has been a sale of the property, the homeowner is still the owner, technically,” said John Rao of the National Consumer Law Center. Despite being seriously delinquent, homeowners can apply for a home loan modification to stay in their homes, even if they were turned down previously. Success after being turned down can be achieved if the homeowner has been hired into a new job, is generating more income, and/or by hiring legal representation to renegotiate the terms of the existing mortgage. The odds of approval are also increasing due to lenders’ reluctance toward taking more properties into foreclosure. Whatever they may have thought about home loan modifications before, at this point they’re a better option than either foreclosure or sitting in limbo.

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Feldman Law Center - Congress Modifies HOPE for Homeowners; CA Senate passes SB 94

Feldman Law Center - News by Feldman Law Center — The U.S. Senate, as well as the California State Senate, are both at work to help homeowners avoid bankruptcy and foreclosure. The U.S. Senate and the California State Senate are also both at work to make lenders happy, balance budgets, and do any number of things that may or may not serve your best interests as a homeowner.

What do you need to know? Why should you care?

The Federal bill HOPE for Homeowners was passed in the summer of 2008 to help prevent foreclosures on the more than 400,000 homes that were facing it. In the first seven months that the law was enacted, the law helped exactly one family stay in their home. That’s right, one. Recently (May, 2009), Congress passed a bill that augments the original HOPE for Homeowners legislation to make it more effective.

In April 2009, in California, State Bill 94 cleared the Senate Judiciary Committee and awaits approval by the Senate Appropriations Committee. State Bill 94 was proposed by Senator Calderon (D-Montebello) and was designed to crackdown on some of the dishonest, disreputable, and predatory firms that are popping up hoping to profit from the misfortune of others. The main focus of the bill is to prevent loan modification firms from requiring payment up front for their services.

While it is possible to negotiate with the lender yourself or to hire a non-profit agencies, when it comes to staying in your home you should look for the most effective and efficient means possible. Hiring a loan modification attorney to help negotiate new terms on your loan can mean the difference between avoiding bankruptcy, foreclosure and a short sale and…not avoiding them. The important thing is that you are able to get out of your financial mess and stay in your home.

Truth is, thousands of loan modifications are successfully negotiated by private sector firms in California and throughout the country. This is important to remember when considering your options. It would be foolish to trust someone who promises something they can’t deliver. It would also be foolish to ignore help from someone who is willing and able to assist. If you are drowning, and someone that has been standing on the bank pulling people out offers you a hand, shouldn’t you take it?

We will continue to hear grumbling about the economy, and what “got us into this mess.” We will continue to hear proposed legislation to regulate, modify and change rules and regulations in the various industries directly linked to this financial crisis. And we will continue to hear pleas from senators, congressmen, banks, loan modification “experts,” and any number of people whose direct interests are involved.

Think about what is best for you. Are you prepared to negotiate a loan modification directly with your lender? The Feldman Law Center is trustworthy, reputable, and ready to help you stay in your home. We specialize in loan modifications and have attorneys on staff who know the business. Call the Feldman Law Center today.

Visit us at http://www.feldmanlawcenter.com or call 800-588-0425.

Resources:

Feldman Law Center: Profile - Business Exchange

Feldman Law Center - Loan Modification Video

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Feldman Law Center – What Do Higher Taxes Mean for Loan Modifications?

In today’s unpredictable economy, you can’t take anything for granted. You don’t know if you’ll have a job tomorrow, if you will be asked to take an unpaid vacation, or if the interest rate on your home mortgage will spike. What if gas prices soar? Will a trip to the grocery store for your family’s weekly necessities cost more? So much of the territory that our country, and the world, is venturing into is unchartered.

While we don’t know what the future holds, we can try to plan appropriately for it. How can you prepare yourself for future expenses, save money, or spend less in your current situation? Many wise people are considering these questions now.

In addition to planning for the future, we can also take advantage of the opportunities that we are offered today. One opportunity being offered to many troubled homeowners is a home loan modification.

President Obama’s housing plan involves offering many people a chance to modify their home loans. If a distressed homeowner lives in his or her property, falls within the requirements for the amount they owe, and meets additional criteria, they could be eligible for the government plan. The FDIC even has a “mod in a box” home loan modification program that they are hoping to enlist lenders in taking part in. Even if you don’t take advantage of the government’s specific plans, and are a homeowner in a volatile financial situation, you can still opt to modify your home loan.

With the help of the Feldman Law Center, you can have a better chance at protecting your financial future. You do not know when home loan modifications will start to taper off, how long you will be at your current job, or how your taxes could be changed in the future. If you are concerned about your adjustable rate mortgage, or a potential bankruptcy or foreclosure, you need the help of experienced attorneys on your side.

The federal government as well as many state governments, are talking about increasing taxes. What is the potential fallout of that? Given the uncertainty we are facing now, it is hard to guess what higher taxes might result in. But perhaps homeowners would have to pay higher property taxes, or perhaps additional fees and penalties could be added to home loan modifications.

Debates on the efficacy of taxes, both low and high, are inevitable. Chances are good that tax rates and structures will soon change. Will this be good for your current situation? Will you pay more, or less? Will you be a part of the population paying for the benefit of others, or will you be the beneficiary? Obviously, this depends on many factors. It doesn’t seem prudent to generalize widely about this. Every situation will end up being different.

It might not be a good idea to wait for a loan modification. They are available now. Call the Feldman Law Center today. We specialize in loan modifications and are ready to assist you today.

Visit us at feldmanlawcenter.com or call 800-588-0425.

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Newton’s Laws Examples (part 2)

A couple of more examples involving Newton’s Laws

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Thats Illegal 4? (Crazy USA laws)

More strange but real laws from around America! WATCH THE WHOLE SERIES: www.youtube.com TWITTER: twitter.com FACEBOOK: facebook.com 2ND CHANNEL: youtube.com STORE: www.districtlines.com

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