Wednesday, November 30, 2011

THE LARGEST RELIGION IN THE UNITED STATES IS "CONSUMERISM"


[Excerpted from the new best-selling book, "LEGAL CONSUMER TIPS AND SECRETS" by former Federal Trade Commission official, Charles Jerome Ware]

If you owe too much money, you can go to prison even though you have not committed a crime.  You can also be kicked out of your home and face a myriad of other negative consequences.

Even so, the largest religion in the United States continues to be “consumerism” – the deeply held belief that buying goods and services makes us better and happier.  Attorney Charles Jerome Ware explores how you can keep spending, maintain your freedom, and stand up for yourself.  He shares ways to prevent foreclosure, discourage identity theft and other forms of fraud, avoid debt settlement scams, and rebuild your credit.

This insider’s guide reveals hundreds of facts to educate and inform the faithful American consumer.  Don’t be bullied into living like a pauper when you can take reasonable steps to improve your financial position.  Changing your life and avoiding pitfalls starts with learning Legal Consumer Tips and Secrets.

Friday, November 25, 2011

QUINCE (15) CONSEJOS PARA GANAR CASOS DE INMIGRACION - Charles Jerome Ware

Formas de Obtener Posición de Residente Permanente

Generalmente, hay en la actualidad cinco (5) formas para obtener posición de residente permanente en los Estados Unidos:
1.  Residente permanente a traves de un miembro familiar
2.  Residente permanente a traves de un empleo;
3.  Residente permanentea a traves de inversion;
4.  Residente permanente a traves de "Loterias de Diversidad"; y
5.  Residente permanente a traves de las disposiciones de "El Registro" de la Ley de Inmigración y Nacionalidad.

[Fuente: USCIS,2009]

Noted Author and Attorney Gives Valuable Advice for Consumers

New book helps consumers manage their debt and explains how to live debt free

BALTIMORE, Md. - Economists struggle to provide answers and solutions to fix the damaged economy, but most agree that credit card and student loan debt play a major part in the economic woes of the U.S.  A recent article on TIME.com titled "Scariest Student Loan Debt Numbers Ever: $100 Billion, $1 Trillion" presents some staggering figures, including the total amount of student loan debt owed which has recently eclipsed $1 trillion.  Seeking to ease the woes of consumers in debt, Charles Jerome Ware introduces his brilliant new book of legal and financial advice, Legal Consumer Tips and Secrets: Avoiding Debtors' Prison in the United States (published by iUniverse).

Alarmed by the high debt held by Americans and the harsh penalties facing them if they fail to repay their loans, Ware took it upon himself to help.  "If you owe too much money, you can go to prison even though you have not committed a crime," says Ware.  "You can also be kicked out of your home and face a myriad of other negative consequences."

Ware presents tips and secrets which can keep readers spending, maintaining their freedom, and standing up for themselves.  He shares ways to prevent foreclosure, discourage identity theft and other forms of fraud, avoid debt settlement scams and rebuild credit.

This insider's guide reveals hundreds of facts to educate and inform the faithful American consumer.  "Don't be bullied up into living like a pauper when you can take reasonable steps to improve your financial position," Ware says.

About the Author
Attorney Charles Jerome Ware is a principal in the national law firm of Charles Jerome Ware, Attorneys and Counselors.  He has served as the special legal counsel to the chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, as a federal administrative law judge, and as a senior trial attorney in both the Antitrust Division and the Criminal Division of the U.S. Justice Department.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Seven Life-Changing Virtues

1.  Faith.
2.  Hope.
3.  Love.
4.  Prudence.
5.  Justice.
6.  Temperance.
7.  Spiritual Growth.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Was Joe Paterno Truthful with the Grand Jury?

We do not presume to know the answer to this question.  But, what we do know is that Pennsylvania law enforcement authorities are asking and investigating whether the icon Penn State football coach has been truthful with them in the ongoing child abuse and molestation investigation involving one of his assistant football team coaches.

Look for more indictments to come in this tragic case.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Traumatic Brain Injuries ("TBIs")

People who are injured in an accident can suffer many different kinds of injuries.  Among the most serious, as well as the hardest to diagnose and treat, are so-called traumatic brain injuries (TBIs), sometimes also known as "closed-head trauma".

TBIs send more than 400,000 people to the hospital for treatment each year, three-quarters of whom are males between the ages of 15 and 34.  This group is over-represented because of the lifestyle that many of the accident victims lead: riding motorcycles without a helmet, participating in dangerous sports, drinking too much, and getting into car accidents.  Although the majority of these injuries are moderate to mild, even a minor TBI can cause the victim to suffer serious problems.