[Abel-tasman] Medicare insurance plans,
they cover what medicare alone doesn't.
Senior Insurance Center
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Sat Oct 5 17:10:14 CEST 2013
Medicare enrollment period for 2013. Compare plans before the deadline...
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CARACAS, Venezuela Tensions are rising in Venezuela as opposition leader
Henrique Capriles pressures the National Electoral Council to announce by
day's end that it will permit a complete audit of the April
14 presidential election.The council said last week that it would allow
an audit of 46 percent of the vote not already audited. It
said it would announce this week when it would start comparing vote
tallies from each machine with the individual vote receipts from that machine.Capriles
is demanding the council announce Thursday that it will allow his team
to also examine registers containing voters' signatures and fingerprints.
State broadcasters interrupted his speech Wednesday night and the ruling
party is increasingly threatening to prosecute him over violence that erupted
after the vote, which the ruling party narrowly won.
and 1,600 rounds per officer,
while the U.S. Army goes through roughly 350 rounds per soldier.He noted
that is "roughly 1,000 rounds more per person.""Their officers use what
seems to be an exorbitant amount of ammunition," he said.Nick Nayak, chief
procurement officer for the Department of Homeland Security, did not challenge
Chaffetz's numbers.However, Nayak sought to counter what he described as
several misconceptions about the bullet buys.Despite reports that the department
was trying to buy up to 1.6 billion rounds over five years,
he said that is not true. He later clarified that the number
is closer to 750 million.He said the department, on average, buys roughly
100 million rounds per year.He also said claims that the department is
stockpiling ammo are "simply not true." Further, he countered claims that
the purchases are helping create broader ammunition shortages in the U.S.The
department has long said it needs the bullets for agents in training
and on duty, and buys in bulk to save money.While Democrats likened
concerns about the purchases to conspiracy theories, Republicans raised
concern about the sheer cost of the ammunition."This is not about conspiracy
theories, this is about good government," Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, said.Rep.
Darrell Issa, R-Calif., who chairs the full Oversight and Government Reform
Committee, said he suspects rounds are being stockpiled, and then either
"disposed of," passed to non-federal agencies, o
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