Will meet with volunteer first responders and discuss legislation to provide them with tax credits

Washington, D.C. - Congressman Dave Loebsack announced today that he will visit volunteer fire departments in Coralville, West Liberty and Kalona, TOMORROW, Thursday, January 15th. Loebsack will highlight the importance of our local volunteer first responders and the impact they have in our communities. He will also discuss legislation he helped introduce that would provide a tax deduction for volunteer first responders as well as help Volunteer Fire Departments and other public safety organizations recruit and retain volunteers.

 

Coralville Fire Department

1501 5th Street

1:00pm

 

West Liberty Fire Department

109 East 2nd Street

2:30pm

 

Kalona Fire Department

310 5th Street

4:30pm

 

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Financial Advisor: Account for Your Spending & Model the Behavior

When it comes to buying power, women are steadily overcoming men. Throughout the next decade, women will control two-thirds of consumer wealth in the United States and will be the beneficiaries of the largest transference of wealth in our country's history, according to Fleishman-Hillard Inc.

"The stats on a woman's earning and buying power are pretty extensive; females are doing better in school than men, we're earning more money than ever before and the business world has known about this trend for years," says Erica L. McCain, a veteran financial expert, LUTCF and founder of McCain & Associates, (www.mccainins.com).

"As women, we're inundated by advertisements. The first thing many of us do in the morning is check our e-mail and social media. Before a wake-up shower we may be hit with appeals from Macy's, Bath and Body Works, Groupon and assorted retailers to 'click for 50 percent off.' "

Of course, these aren't "deals" so much as advertising campaigns, she says. In fact, there are plenty of women who spend good money on things - whether on themselves or their children - that are relatively frivolous, "I know because I was one of them," says McCain, author of "Ladies With Loot."

"With more money comes the inclination to spend it but, to be sure, you'll need that resource for something more important down the road."

McCain shares the ways in which women can better help themselves, and their children, by better utilizing money.

•  "Retail therapy" doesn't work; think of money as a precious resource. Money can buy you happiness. We all know that feeling of wanting an item that will make you feel good for a few hours, but sooner rather than later, most of these retail goods quickly amount to stuff. Lasting happiness goes far beyond "retail therapy." Money facilitates happiness better by being an available resource for more important things, such as emergencies, tuition for children, peace of mind for retirement or a family vacation that everyone will remember.

•  You can't cash in your children's toys to pay for college. Buying nice and fun things for our kids is enjoyable; we can feel their joy and we like when they're happy. However, just like buying something that you enjoy - a new purse or shoes - that joy is fleeting, and in the long term, it's worth questioning the value of an item. The cost of a professional baseball bat exceeds $100, and for a professional glove you can pay up to $500, but these aren't the things that will make your child truly enjoy baseball. Imagine how that money will be needed to pay for textbooks in college!

•  Counting calories? - Try counting dollars. We know what it's like to want a tasty muffin for breakfast, but many of us refuse such treats with the realization of what it'll take to burn off the excess calories. We know that a moment of pleasure equals extra time on the treadmill. Apply that shrewd approach to money. How many hours do you work in order to pay for extravagant purchases, and could that money be better used elsewhere? Understanding the value of a dollar will help you live a more fulfilled life.

About Erica L. McCain, LUTCF

Erica L. McCain is a financial professional with a Life Underwriter Training Council Fellow (LUTCF) designation and more than 15 years of experience. She founded her own firm, McCain & Associates, (www.mccainins.com), in 2007, intent upon providing the detailed, personalized services retirees and pre-retirees need to pursue their retirement goals. She specializes in the financials for women in all stages of their lives and careers. McCain is a member of the Million Dollar Round Table (MDRT), the premier association of financial professionals.

Washington, D.C. - Congressman Dave Loebsack will have a member of his staff in Clinton County for open office hours. Henry Marquard, Loebsack's District Representative, will be at the following locations. Marquard will be on hand to work with individuals who are having difficulty with a government agency, have suggestions for Dave, or would just like to share their concerns. Members of the public are invited to attend. Marquard holds regular office hours throughout Eastern Iowa.

If residents are unable to attend but have a concern to share with the Congressman, please call our district office toll-free at 1-866-914-IOWA (4692).

Marquard's schedule is as follows.

Tuesday, Jan. 13

Camanche City Hall

917 Third Street

9:00 - 10:00 AM

Clinton City Hall

611 South Third Street, 1st Floor

It is not about what political party a member Congress belongs to, it is about accountability for government to do what is right.  The Blue Water Navy Agent Orange Act has failed.  House Bill HR-543 was stalled in the VA committee even though there were 258 co-sponsors in support of the Bill enough for a House vote. 

More Vietnam vets will die, many cannot pay medical expenses some are forced to take second mortgages on their homes or sell their homes.  Does Congress care, most do not.  However we vets do have a few caring friends in Congress, they are a minority.       

There are those in Congress so full of greed to fill their own pockets for the next election rather than provide proper VA benefits to our veterans who come home sick and broken.  This is especially true of the Vietnam War veterans.  With the 2014 Congress in session will our Vietnam veterans be once more denied what they have earned?  The dollars needed for VA benefits is a trifle amount compared to the hundreds of billions we give away.  Perhaps our Congress should serve on the front lines in war let them know how it feels to dodge bullets and be sprayed with herbicides.

In time of war the enemy does not care about race, creed, or political party.  Our Congress discriminates against those who served our Country, there is no accountability.  To our Members of Congress, in ten more years there will be no Vietnam vets left living for you to contend with, what a shameful legacy

To mark the anniversary of our 9th year, we will again be offering a Planting of Pavers. A path to the future has been paved outside the main entrance to the Moline Public Library.  For your $150 contribution to the library, we will have a decorative paver engraved with your name or that of a loved one and placed near the entrance to the library.  You will have the satisfaction of knowing that your gift contributed directly to the enhancement of our library and the enrichment of its patrons.

The number of available pavers is limited. To order a paver, pick up a form at the Moline Public Library (3210 41st Street) or download the form from molinelibrary.com. Turn in completed forms and your tax deductible contribution by Friday, March 27, 2015.  Pavers will be planted in June 2015. For more information, contact Sue Wheatley at 309-524-2443.

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DES MOINES, IA - In conjunction with ABC's The Bachelor, the Greater Des Moines Convention and Visitors Bureau and Greater Des Moines Partnership will engage social followers in a campaign surrounding the show's star, Iowan Chris Soules, and the episode filmed in Greater Des Moines. Tonight's season premiere teased footage shot in Iowa, confirmed by the Greater Des Moines Convention and Visitors Bureau and Greater Des Moines Partnership in October.

For real-time updates, follow the hashtag #IowaBachelor on the following social channels:

Greater Des Moines Convention and Visitors Bureau

·        Twitter: @catchdesmoines

·        Facebook: Greater Des Moines Convention & Visitors Bureau

·        Instagram: catchdesmoines

Greater Des Moines Partnership

·        Twitter: @Downtown50309

·        Facebook: Downtown Des Moines

·        Instagram: Downtown Des Moines

Additional details, including the airdate of the Greater Des Moines episode of ABC's The Bachelor, will be made available at a later date.

About ABC's The Bachelor

Chris Soules, a native Iowan from Arlington, is the star of the 19th edition of The Bachelor, airing Mondays (7-9:01 p.m., CST) on ABC. The following ABC social media channels will also provide official updates:

Twitter

·        The Bachelor: @BachelorABC and @TheBachelorTV

·        Chris Soules: @C_Soules

·        Chris Harrison: @ChrisBHarrison

Facebook

·        The Bachelor: Facebook/TheBachelor

Instagram

·        The Bachelor: @BachelorABC

·        Chris Soules: @SoulesChris

·        Chris Harrison: @ChrisBHarrison

For more information on ABC's The Bachelor, visit abc.com/TheBachelor.

The Greater Des Moines Convention and Visitors Bureau is a not-for-profit organization whose mission is to promote Greater Des Moines as a fun, vibrant and affordable destination statewide, nationally and internationally. Our focus increases visitors to our community through meetings, conventions, sports events, leisure travel, and group tours, thereby contributing to the local economy.

Creates Initiatives to Help Undocumented Immigrants Apply for Federal Administrative Relief and Improve Public Safety in Illinois Communities

CHICAGO - Governor Pat Quinn today issued two executive orders to help support the state's undocumented immigrants in their integration into communities across Illinois. The orders create the Governor's New Americans Welcoming Initiative and the Governor's New Americans Trust Initiative to help undocumented immigrants apply for federal administrative relief and to improve cooperation between immigrants and law enforcement agencies. Today's action is part of Governor Quinn's agenda to support comprehensive immigration reform and make Illinois a welcoming place for all people.

"Illinois is committed to supporting President Obama's immigration action and helping eligible residents apply for federal administrative relief," Governor Quinn said. "In Illinois, we want everyone to have the opportunity to succeed. By supporting our immigrant community and building trust with law enforcement, we continue our efforts to make Illinois the most welcoming state in the nation."

The Governor's New Americans Welcoming Initiative will coordinate state efforts to assist those in Illinois seeking federal administrative relief. The initiative will help applicants obtain necessary records to verify state residency such as immigration, medical, employment and school immunization records. State agencies will provide information on how to obtain records and designate a liaison to coordinate agency efforts. Illinois' 10 Welcoming Centers will serve as information centers for administrative relief applicants and include translators to assist applicants. An estimated four percent of Illinois' population may be eligible for temporary administrative relief.

A second executive order creates the Governor's New Americans Trust Initiative, which will improve cooperation between the immigrant community and law enforcement. Under the new initiative, state law enforcement agencies may not stop, arrest, search or detain a person based solely on the individual's immigration status or on the basis of an immigration detainer or administrative immigration warrant. Law enforcement agencies will also provide training to state police officers on U and T nonimmigrant visas and other remedies for immigrant survivors of criminal activity. These measures are intended to improve public safety across the state by protecting victims and encouraging more people to report crimes.

Copies of both executive orders are attached.

Governor Quinn has worked to make Illinois the most welcoming state in the nation for people of all races, ethnicities, religions and nationalities. In 2012, the Governor signed legislation to ensure that undocumented immigrants in Illinois are able to obtain a driver's license. Governor Quinn, a strong supporter of comprehensive immigration reform at the federal level, also fought for the Illinois DREAM Act, a historic law that is opening educational opportunities for Illinois children.

The Governor has long advocated for immigrants' rights by working to ensure that everyone takes full advantage of health insurance, job training and foreclosure prevention programs, creating and pushing multilingual awareness campaigns so that no one misses out. He also expanded his Office of New Americans Welcoming Centers as immigrants settle communities throughout Illinois. Under Governor Quinn the number of Welcoming Centers has grown from one to 10.

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(DES MOINES) - Gov. Terry E. Branstad today issued the following statement after learning that former Iowa Lt. Governor Arthur (Art) A. Neu passed away.

"Iowa lost a dedicated public servant today with the passing of Art Neu," said Branstad. "I had the honor of succeeding Art as lieutenant governor of Iowa. Art's passion for his home community of Carroll was always evident. I offer my deepest condolences to his family."  

 

Neu served as lieutenant governor of Iowa from 1973-1979. Prior to being elected lieutenant governor, Neu served in the State Senate from 1967-1972. He served on the Iowa Board of Regents from 1979-1985 and as Mayor of Carroll, Iowa, from 1982-1985. A photo of Neu can be found here.

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CHICAGO - Governor Pat Quinn today issued the following statement regarding the passing of former State Representative Rosemary Mulligan:

"Rosemary Mulligan was an inspiring leader who was never afraid to reach across the aisle to get the job done. Today we mourn her loss.

"As a member of the House, Rosemary was a true public servant who fought for the people of Illinois. She was a respected voice on a wide range of issues from human services to early childhood education, victims' rights and transportation.

"Rosemary was an energetic bridge-builder who made Illinois a better place. She will be greatly missed.

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"You're either a cop or little people."?Police captain Harry Bryant in Blade Runner

For those of us who have managed to survive 2014 with our lives intact and our freedoms hanging by a thread, it has been a year of crackdowns, clampdowns, shutdowns, showdowns, shootdowns, standdowns, knockdowns, putdowns, breakdowns, lockdowns, takedowns, slowdowns, meltdowns, and never-ending letdowns.

We've been held up, stripped down, faked out, photographed, frisked, fracked, hacked, tracked, cracked, intercepted, accessed, spied on, zapped, mapped, searched, shot at, tasered, tortured, tackled, trussed up, tricked, lied to, labeled, libeled, leered at, shoved aside, saddled with debt not of our own making, sold a bill of goods about national security, tuned out by those representing us, tossed aside, and taken to the cleaners.

As I point out in my book A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State, we've had our freedoms turned inside out, our democratic structure flipped upside down, and our house of cards left in a shambles.

We've had our children burned by flashbang grenades, our dogs shot, and our old folks hospitalized after "accidental" encounters with marauding SWAT teams. We've been told that as citizens we have no rights within 100 miles of our own border, now considered "Constitution-free zones." We've had our faces filed in government databases, our biometrics crosschecked against criminal databanks, and our consumerist tendencies catalogued for future marketing overtures.

We've been given the runaround on government wrongdoing, starting with President Obama's claim that the National Security Agency has never abused its power to spy on Americans' phone calls and emails. All the while, the NSA has been racing to build a supercomputer that could break through "every kind of encryption used to protect banking, medical, business and government records around the world." Despite the fact that the NSA's domestic surveillance program has been shown to be ineffective at preventing acts of terrorism, the agency continues to vacuum up almost 200 million text messages a day.

We've seen the police transformed from community peacekeepers to point guards for the militarized corporate state. From Boston to Ferguson and every point in between, police have pushed around, prodded, poked, probed, scanned, shot and intimidated the very individuals?we the taxpayers?whose rights they were hired to safeguard. Networked together through fusion centers, police have surreptitiously spied on our activities and snooped on our communications, using hi-tech devices provided by the Department of Homeland Security.

We've been deemed suspicious for engaging in such dubious activities as talking too long on a cell phone and stretching too long before jogging, dubbed extremists and terrorists for criticizing the government and suggesting it is tyrannical or oppressive, and subjected to forced colonoscopies and anal probes for allegedly rolling through a stop sign.

We've been arrested for all manner of "crimes" that never used to be considered criminal, let alone uncommon or unlawful, behavior: letting our kids walk to the playground alone, giving loose change to a homeless man, feeding the hungry, and living off the grid.

We've been sodomized, victimized, jeopardized, demoralized, traumatized, stigmatized, vandalized, demonized, polarized and terrorized, often without having done anything to justify such treatment. Blame it on a government mindset that renders us guilty before we've even been charged, let alone convicted, of any wrongdoing. In this way, law-abiding individuals have had their homes mistakenly raided by SWAT teams that got the address wrong. One accountant found himself at the center of a misguided police standoff after surveillance devices confused his license plate with that of a drug felon.

We've been railroaded into believing that our votes count, that we live in a democracy, that elections make a difference, that it matters whether we vote Republican or Democrat, and that our elected officials are looking out for our best interests. Truth be told, we live in an oligarchy, politicians represent only the profit motives of the corporate state, whose leaders know all too well that there is no discernible difference between red and blue politics, because there is only one color that matters in politics?green.

We've gone from having privacy in our inner sanctums to having nowhere to hide, with smart pills that monitor the conditions of our bodies, homes that spy on us (with smart meters that monitor our electric usage and thermostats and light switches that can be controlled remotely) and cars that listen to our conversations and track our whereabouts. Even our cities have become wall-to-wall electronic concentration camps, with police now able to record hi-def video of everything that takes place within city limits.

We've had our schools locked down, our students handcuffed, shackled and arrested for engaging in childish behavior such as food fights, our children's biometrics stored, their school IDs chipped, their movements tracked, and their data bought, sold and bartered for profit by government contractors, all the while they are treated like criminals and taught to march in lockstep with the police state.

We've been rendered enemy combatants in our own country, denied basic due process rights, held against our will without access to an attorney or being charged with a crime, and left to molder in jail until such a time as the government is willing to let us go or allow us to defend ourselves.

We've had the very military weapons we funded with our hard-earned tax dollars used against us, from unpiloted, weaponized drones tracking our movements on the nation's highways and byways and armored vehicles, assault rifles, sound cannons and grenade launchers in towns with little to no crime to an arsenal of military-grade weapons and equipment given free of charge to schools and universities.

We've been silenced, censored and forced to conform, shut up in free speech zones, gagged by hate crime laws, stifled by political correctness, muzzled by misguided anti-bullying statutes, and pepper sprayed for taking part in peaceful protests.

We've been shot by police for reaching for a license during a traffic stop, reaching for a baby during a drug bust, carrying a toy sword down a public street, and wearing headphones that hamper our ability to hear.

We've had our tax dollars spent on $30,000 worth of Starbucks for Dept. of Homeland Security employees, $630,000 in advertising to increase Facebook "likes" for the State Dept., and close to $25 billion to fund projects ranging from the silly to the unnecessary, such as laughing classes for college students and programs teaching monkeys to play video games and gamble.

We've been treated like guinea pigs, targeted by the government and social media for psychological experiments on how to manipulate the masses. We've been tasered for talking back to police, tackled for taking pictures of police abuses, and threatened with jail time for invoking our rights. We've even been arrested by undercover cops stationed in public bathrooms who interpret men's "shaking off" motions after urinating to be acts of lewdness.

We've had our possessions seized and stolen by law enforcement agencies looking to cash in on asset forfeiture schemes, our jails privatized and used as a source of cheap labor for megacorporations, our gardens smashed by police seeking out suspicious-looking marijuana plants, and our buying habits turned into suspicious behavior by a government readily inclined to view its citizens as terrorists.

We've had our cities used for military training drills, with Black Hawk helicopters buzzing the skies, Urban Shield exercises overtaking our streets, and active shooter drills wreaking havoc on unsuspecting bystanders in our schools, shopping malls and other "soft target" locations.

We've been told that national security is more important than civil liberties, that police dogs' noses are sufficient cause to carry out warrantless searches, that the best way not to get raped by police is to "follow the law," that what a police officer says in court will be given preference over what video footage shows, that an upright posture and acne are sufficient reasons for a cop to suspect you of wrongdoing, that police can stop and search a driver based solely on an anonymous tip, and that police officers have every right to shoot first and ask questions later if they feel threatened.

Now there are those who still insist that they are beyond the reach of the police state because they have done nothing wrong and have nothing to fear. To those sanctimonious few, secure in their delusions, let this be a warning: the danger posed by the American police state applies equally to all of us: lawbreaker and law abider alike, black and white, rich and poor, liberal and conservative, blue collar and white collar, and any other distinction you'd care to trot out.

The lesson of 2014 is simply this: in a police state, you're either a cop or you're one of the little people. Right now, we are the little people, the servants, the serfs, the grunts who must obey without question or suffer the consequences.

If there is to be any hope in 2015 for restoring our freedoms and reclaiming our runaway government, we will have to start by breathing life into those three powerful words that set the tone for everything that follows in the Constitution: "we the people."

It's time to stop waiting patiently for change to happen and, as Gandhi once advised, be the change you want to see in the world.

Get mad, get outraged, get off your duff and get out of your house, get in the streets, get in people's faces, get down to your local city council, get over to your local school board, get your thoughts down on paper, get your objections plastered on protest signs, get your neighbors, friends and family to join their voices to yours, get your representatives to pay attention to your grievances, get your kids to know their rights, get your local police to march in lockstep with the Constitution, get your media to act as watchdogs for the people and not lapdogs for the corporate state, get your act together, and get your house in order.

In other words, get moving. Time is growing short, and the police state is closing in. Power to the people!

This commentary is also available at www.rutherford.org.

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