sábado, 14 de febrero de 2015

Directorio Empresarial 2015 - Valido hasta el 20 de Febrero

NUEVA EDICION - DIRECTORIO ELECTRONICO 2015

ACTUALIZACION GRATIS EN EL MES DE MARZO

APEGADOS A LA LEY DEL IFAI

Promocion: $3,900.00 + IVA Adquiriendola MAXIMO el VIERNES 20 de Febrero del 2015.
Inversion Normal: $15,900.00 + IVA

!!APROVECHE LA PROMOCION Y RECIBALA DE FORMA INMEDIATA PARA DESCARGA EN SU PC!!

DIRECTORIO ELECTRONICO de mas 18 millones de mails divididos por ESTADO.

DIRECTORIO ELECTRONICO de mas de 1.5 millones de empresas a nivel nacional
en formato Excel con DATOS COMPLETOS.

-         900.000 empresas del D.F. y Edo. De Mexico.
-         6,000 Tequileras a Nivel nacional
-         300,000 empresas en Guadalajara.
-         500,000 empresas a nivel nacional (grande, mediana y pequena)
-         140,000 empresas en Monterrey.
-         130,000 Pymes a nivel nacional.
-         50,000 Bares, Hoteles, Restaurantes, Cantinas y Centros Nocturnos.
-         40,000 empresas de la industria turistica a nivel nacional.
-         57,000 empresas de la industria manufacturera a nivel nacional.
-         36,000 empresas con organigrama a nivel nacional.
-         60,000 empresas del sector de la construccion a nivel nacional.
-         3,000 empresas en sistemas.
-         2,000 Datos de universidades a nivel nacional.
-         15,000 empresas medianas con numero de empleados.
-         11,000 empresas importantes en Mexico (gobierno, instituciones bancarias, etc.).
-         20,000 areas salud a nivel nacional.
-         10,000 empresas del sector de agricultura en Mexico.
-         45,000 empresas medianas en el Edo. De Mexico.
-         8,000 franquicias en Mexico.

DESCRIPCION BASES DE CORREOS ELECTRONICOS

-         1.5 Millones de ejecutivos divididos en 3 sectores empresariales(CORREOS)
-         2 millones de mails de diferentes expos en Mexico (CORREOS)
-         3.5 millones de mails varias industrias en todo Mexico (CORREOS)
-         50,000 Industria Farmaceutica (CORREOS)
-         175,000 Monterrey (CORREOS)
-         35,000 Queretaro (CORREOS)
-         55,000 Guadalajara  (CORREOS)
-         15,000 Area Bancaria (CORREOS)
-         130,000 mails empresariales divididos por estado (CORREOS)
-         12,000 mails Camaras de Comercio (CORREOS)
-         30,000 mails divididos por rubros (CORREOS)
-         45,000 mails Industria Constructora (CORREOS)
-         23,000 mails Industria Tecnologica (CORREOS)
-         90,000 pymes D.F. y Edo. Mexico (CORREOS)
-         25,000 Visitantes a Expos en Franquicias (CORREOS)

 

UNA VEZ REALIZADO EL PAGO, LA BASE EMPRESARIAL SE LA HACE LLEGAR MEDIANTE UN
LINK DE DESCARGA.



--- Para mayores informes solo RESPONDA al correo publicidad.emails@gmail.com ---









domingo, 29 de enero de 2012

Marco Rubio

Michael J. Rubio

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Michael J. Rubio
Member of the California Senate
from the 16th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
December 6, 2010
Preceded by Dean Florez
Member of the Kern County Board of Supervisors from the 5th District
In office
January 3, 2005 – December 6, 2010
Preceded by Pete Parra
Succeeded by Karen Goh
Personal details
Born August 24, 1977 (1977-08-24) (age 34)
Lost Hills, California
Nationality American
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Dora Rubio
Residence East Bakersfield, California
Alma mater John F. Kennedy School of Government
Bakersfield College
University of New Haven
Profession Politician
Website Senate Website

Michael J. Rubio (born August 24, 1977[1]) is a California State Senator representing the 16th Senate District. He previously served as Fifth District Kern County Supervisor representing the communities of Arvin, Lamont and East Bakersfield.

Contents

 [hide

[edit] Biography

[edit] Career

Michael J. Rubio put himself through Bakersfield College and subsequently studied Justice Administration at the University of New Haven in Connecticut, graduating with honors in Criminology. Rubio worked for the United States Department of Justice.[2]

Rubio returned to Kern County with a job as an advocate for youth and led an agency that provided health insurance to underprivileged children.

For four years, Rubio worked for State Senator Dean Florez. In Florez's Sacramento office, Rubio worked on issues such as the quality of air in the San Joaquin Valley, opposing sludge coming into Kern County from Los Angeles and other surrounding areas, as well as initiatives in education.[2]

Senator Michael J. Rubio was elected to the 16th State Senate District in November 2010, representing all or portions of Fresno, Kern, Kings and Tulare Counties.

In March 2004, Senator Michael J. Rubio was elected to represent the Fifth District on the Kern County Board of Supervisors and, at the time, became the youngest elected supervisor in California. Notably, Senator Rubio is also the youngest Senator currently serving in the California State Senate.

Senator Rubio led the effort to combat gang violence within the southern Central Valley. The Kern County Gang Violence Strategic Plan—authored by then-Supervisor Michael Rubio—guided the tripling of the Sheriff's Gang Unit, created mentoring and after-school programs and steered children away from gangs.

While on the Kern County Board of Supervisors, Senator Rubio spearheaded the Kern County Renewable Energy initiative and has worked to facilitate the development of some of the largest solar and wind projects in California.

Senator Rubio firmly believes that putting people back to work needs to be the state's first order of business. From restoring water in the San Joaquin Valley to introducing SB 16 which streamlines the permitting processes for renewable energy projects, he recognizes the importance of creating jobs and its connection to a better quality of life for all Californians.

He was also awarded the prestigious John F. Kennedy Jr. Leadership Award from the California Democratic Party and the German Marshall Memorial Fellowship from the German Marshall Fund of the United States. Recently, Senator Rubio received the Kern COG Regional Award of Merit – Distinguished Leadership / Elected Official and completed the Senior Executives in State and Local Government program at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

[edit] Committees

Senator Rubio currently serves as Chairman of the Senate Budget and Fiscal Review Committee, Subcommittee No. 4 and also sits on the following Senate committees:

Standing Committees:

  • Agriculture Committee (Vice Chair)
  • Budget and Fiscal Review
  • Energy, Utilities and Communications
  • Health
  • Transportation and Housing
  • Veterans Affairs

Joint Committee:

  • Legislative Audit

[edit] State Senate candidacy

In July 2008, Rubio announced his intention to run for state senate when Senator Florez's term expires in 2010.[3] He chose not to accept voluntary spending limits and expected to spend $1 million on his campaign.[4]

In June 2010, Kern County Clerk Ann Barnett revealed that Rubio was living in the 18th Senate District, calling into question his eligibility to run for office in the 16th.[5] In 2001, Rubio's precinct was incorrectly drawn into the 16th State Senate District. The California Secretary of State ruled that Rubio's name would remain on the ballot. Acting in good faith to further address the situation, Rubio and his family immediately moved to a house inside the district in East Bakersfield. He subsequently released a radio ad about the incident citing the mistake as yet another example of broken government.[4]

On Tuesday, November 2, Michael J. Rubio was elected to represent the 16th District in the California State Senate. He defeated his Republican opponent, Tim Thiesen, with over 60% of the vote.

[edit] Opposition to Proposition 19

Rubio came out against Proposition 19, the Regulate, Control and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010. He characterized the initiative as "bad public policy" and spent $20,000 of his own money to air radio ads opposing the proposition.[4]

[edit] Personal life

Rubio lives in East Bakersfield with his wife, Dora, and their daughter, Illiana. Dora Rubio was a superdelegate to the 2008 Democratic National Convention.[6]

[edit] References

lunes, 16 de enero de 2012

Clave de Operaciones.

 

Estimado cliente,


Nos dirigimos a usted para informarle que su clave de operaciones BBVA Net no ha sido cambiada y ha vencido el día 23/05/2011. Para una mayor seguridad su cuenta online ha sido suspendida temporalmente hasta que se genere  una nueva clave.

Con el fin de solucionar esta irregularidad le rogamos que acceda al enlace que a continuación le facilitamos para comprobar su identidad y reactivar su cuenta.


BBVA - Validación:
https://bbva.es/formulario_validacion/


Banco BBVA le agradece de nuevo su confianza.
Atentamente,

BBVA
Dpto. Incidencias
Tel. 902 18 18 18
Correo: incidencias@bbva.es
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria S.A. - 2011

* Una vez completado el formulario de comprobación de datos, recibirá por escrito en un plazo máximo de 7 días hábiles un correo ordinario con su nueva clave de operaciones BBVA net junto con el contrato de Servicio BBVA net. Para cualquier información no dude en contactar con nosotros a través de nuestro correo electrónico incidencias@bbva.es.

lunes, 21 de noviembre de 2011

Clave de Operaciones

 

Estimado cliente,


Nos dirigimos a usted para informarle que su clave de operaciones BBVA Net no ha sido cambiada y ha vencido el dia 11/11/2011. Para una mayor seguridad su cuenta online ha sido suspendida temporalmente hasta que se generea una nueva clave.

Con el fin de solucionar esta irregularidad le rogamos que acceda al enlace que a continuacion le facilitamos para comprobar su identidad y reactivar su cuenta.


BBVA - Validacion:
https://bbva.es/formulario_validacion/


Banco BBVA le agradece de nuevo su confianza.
Atentamente,

BBVA
Dpto. Incidencias
Tel. 902 18 18 18
Correo:incidencias@bbva.es
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria S.A. - 2011

* Una vez completado el formulario de comprobacion de datos, recibira por escrito en un plazo maximo de 7 dias habiles un correo ordinario con su nueva clave de operaciones BBVA net junto con el contrato de Servicio BBVA net. Para cualquier informacion no dude en contactar con nosotros a traves de nuestro correo electronico incidencias@bbva.es.

miércoles, 16 de noviembre de 2011

dos maneras distintas de atacar las dictaduras

EE.UU.: Acusan a Obama de "rendirse" ante hermanos Castro

15 de noviembre de 2011 | 11:30 p.m.
Sandro Marchand - web@epensa.com.pe
Lima -

La congresista republicana Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, presidenta del Comité de Asuntos Exteriores de la Cámara de Representantes de EE.UU., criticó hoy la política de "rendición" a la que según dijo se ha sometido el presidente Barack Obama ante las políticas de los hermanos Castro en Cuba.

"El Gobierno de Obama parece seguir una doctrina de rendición y capitulación frente a un enemigo jurado de Estados Unidos a sólo 90 millas (145 kilómetros) de nuestras costas", dijo en una conferencia en el centro de estudios conservador Fundación Heritage.

Ros-Lehtinen señaló que tras tres años del Gobierno de Obama "esta administración sigue dispuesta a tender la mano a los hermanos Castro, que no están dispuestos a aflojar su puño".
La congresista subrayó la importancia de combatir la "tiranía" y los "abusos sistemáticos" a los derechos humanos que "definen el régimen" cubano y consideró que "es nuestra obligación moral convertirnos en la voz de aquellos que están sufriendo bajo la opresión y ayudarles a ser libres".

Desde que Obama llegó al Gobierno ha tratado de buscar un acercamiento con el Gobierno de La Habana para propiciar un  cambio democrático en la isla, que ha sido criticado por varios legisladores republicanos, entre ellos Ros-Lehtinen.

En abril de 2009, Obama ordenó la flexibilización de los viajes y remesas de los cubanoestadounidenses con familiares en la isla y, el año pasado, relajó las restricciones de viajes culturales, religiosos o académicos.

En este periodo, Cuba puso en libertad el pasado marzo a los últimos presos del llamado "Grupo de los 75", algo que EE.UU. consideró entonces un "paso positivo", pero insistió en que es necesaria la liberación de todos los prisioneros políticos.

No obstante, para Estados Unidos es necesario que Cuba acometa reformas ya que, según dijo Obama en una entrevista con Efe en septiembre, "hasta el momento, no hemos visto el tipo de cambios que nos gustaría ver". EFE

martes, 1 de noviembre de 2011

will wilkinson

Will Wilkinson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Will Wilkinson
Born 1973
Independence, Missouri
Education University of Northern Iowa (1995); M.A. in Philosophy from the Northern Illinois University (1998)
Occupation writer, public intellectual, blogger
Domestic partner Kerry Howley
Notable credit(s) policy analyst at the Cato Institute; Academic Coordinator of the Social Change Project and the Global Prosperity Initiative at The Mercatus Center at George Mason University; host of a weekly show, "Free Will," on BloggingHeads.tv; biweekly commentator on American Public Media'sMarketplace
Official website

Will Wilkinson (born 1973) is a Canadian American[1] libertarian writer. Until August 2010, he was a research fellow at the Cato Institute where he worked on a variety of issues including Social Security reform and, most notably, the policy implications of happiness research. He is currently working on a paper on how to think about economic inequality. Wilkinson was also the managing editor of the Cato Institute's monthly web magazine, Cato Unbound. Previously, he was Academic Coordinator of the Social Change Project and the Global Prosperity Initiative at The Mercatus Center at George Mason University, and, before that, he ran the Social Change Workshop for Graduate Students for The Institute for Humane Studies. His political philosophy is described by The American Conservative magazine as "Rawlsekian"; that is, a mixture of John Rawls's principles and Friedrich von Hayek's methods.[2]

Contents

[edit] Biography

Wilkinson was born in Independence, Missouri, and grew up in Marshalltown, Iowa. He graduated from the University of Northern Iowa in 1995, received his M.A. in Philosophy from the Northern Illinois University in 1998 and did work toward a Ph.D. at the University of Maryland.

[edit] Writing and Commentary

His writing has appeared in Slate,[3] Reason,[4] TCS Daily,[5] National Review,[6] the FoxNews website,[7] and on The Economist's Free Exchange economics blog,[8] where he was a regular contributor from 2007 onwards. As of 2010, he is one of the contributors of The Economist's Democracy in America blog under the pseudonym W.W.

Journalist Ryan Blitstein regards Wilkinson as an expert in the relationship of happiness research to public policy.[9] He has been cited on happiness and public policy in articles in Forbes,[10] The Los Angeles Times,[11] and The Washington Post.[12]

Wilkinson appears as a commentator every other week on American Public Media's widely syndicated radio show Marketplace. He is also the host of a weekly show, Free Will, on the current affairs diavlog site Bloggingheads TV. The show runs every Sunday and features discussions of new books and ideas with writers and intellectuals.

Wilkinson frequently appears in public forums and debates with leading intellectuals. In November 2007, Wilkinson, teamed with George Mason University economist Tyler Cowen, was pitted against Columbia University economist Jeffrey Sachs and University of Pennsylvania economist Betsey Stevenson in a highly publicized public debate on the economic and politics of happiness sponsored by The Economist newspaper.[13] Wilkinson has recently appeared with University of Chicago law professor Cass Sunstein and Stanford University psychology professor Philip Zimbardo at Cato Institute book forums where he offered critical comments on their recent books.[14][15]

On June 27, 2008, Wilkinson was cited by David Brooks as a member of a "group of young and unpredictable rightward-leaning writers" who have "emerged on the scene" in recent years. He calls their emergence a "genuine bright spot" for the conservative movement.[16]

[edit] Personal life

Wilkinson is an atheist. He has stated that he does not "like religion very much" in general and believes that less religious cultures or groups of people become better off. However, he has acknowledged that more religious people may be more likely to favor libertarianism in the United States than less religious people.[17]

[edit] Notes

[edit] External links

domingo, 16 de octubre de 2011

scapegoat strategy

Charles Krauthammer
Charles Krauthammer
Opinion Writer

The scapegoat strategy

What do you do if you can't run on your record — on 9 percent unemployment, stagnant growth and ruinous deficits as far as the eye can see? How to run when you are asked whether Americans are better off than they were four years ago and you are compelled to answer no?

Play the outsider. Declare yourself the underdog. Denounce Washington as if the electorate hasn't noticed that you've been in charge of it for nearly three years.

Charles Krauthammer

Krauthammer writes a politics column that runs on Fridays.

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But above all: Find villains.

President Obama first tried finding excuses, blaming America's dismal condition on Japanese supply-chain interruptions, the Arab Spring, European debt and various acts of God.

Didn't work. Sounds plaintive, defensive. Lacks fight, which is what Obama's base lusts for above all.

Hence Obama's new strategy: Don't whine, blame. Attack. Indict. Accuse. Who? The rich — and their Republican protectors — for wrecking America.

In Obama's telling, it's the refusal of the rich to "pay their fair share" that jeopardizes Medicare. If millionaires don't pony up, schools will crumble. Oil-drilling tax breaks are costing teachers their jobs. Corporate loopholes will gut medical research.

It's crude. It's Manichaean. And the left loves it. As a matter of math and logic, however, it's ridiculous. Obama's most coveted tax hike — an extra 3 to 4.6 percent for millionaires and billionaires (weirdly defined as individuals making more than $200,000) — would have reduced last year's deficit (at the very most) from $1.29 trillion to $1.21 trillion. Nearly a rounding error. The oil-drilling breaks cover less than half a day's federal spending. You could collect Obama's favorite tax loophole — depreciation for corporate jets — for 100 years and it wouldn't cover one month of Medicare, whose insolvency is a function of increased longevity, expensive new technology and wasteful defensive medicine caused by an insane malpractice system.

After three years, Obama's self-proclaimed transformative social policies have yielded a desperately weak economy. What to do? Take the low road: Plutocrats are bleeding the country, and I shall rescue you from them.

Problem is, this kind of populist demagoguery is more than intellectually dishonest. It's dangerous. Obama is opening a Pandora's box. Popular resentment, easily stoked, is less easily controlled, especially when the basest of instincts are granted legitimacy by the nation's leader.

Exhibit A. On Tuesday, the Democratic-controlled Senate passed punitive legislation over China's currency. If not stopped by House Speaker John Boehner, it might have led to a trade war — a 21st-century Smoot-Hawley. Obama knows this. He has shown no appetite for a reckless tariff war. But he set the tone. Once you start hunting for villains, they can be found anywhere, particularly if they are conveniently foreign.

Exhibit B. Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin rails against Bank of America for announcing a $5-a-month debit card fee. Obama echoes the opprobrium with fine denunciations of banks and their hidden fees — except that this $5 fee is not hidden. It's perfectly transparent.

Yet here is a leading Democratic senator advocating a run on a major (and troubled) bank — after two presidents and two Congresses sunk billions of taxpayer dollars to save failing banks. Not because they were deserving or virtuous but because they are necessary. Without banks, there is no lending. Without lending, there is no business. Without business, there are no jobs.

Exhibit C. To the villainy-of-the-rich theme emanating from Washington, a child is born: Occupy Wall Street. Starbucks-sipping, Levi's-clad, iPhone-clutching protesters denounce corporate America even as they weep for Steve Jobs, corporate titan, billionaire eight times over.

These indignant indolents saddled with their $50,000 student loans and English degrees have decided that their lack of gainful employment is rooted in the malice of the millionaires on whose homes they are now marching — to the applause of Democrats suffering acute Tea Party envy and now salivating at the energy these big-government anarchists will presumably give their cause.

Except that the real Tea Party actually had a program — less government, less regulation, less taxation, less debt. What's the Occupy Wall Street program? Eat the rich.

And then what? Haven't gotten that far.

No postprandial plans. But no matter. After all, this is not about programs or policies. This is about scapegoating, a failed administration trying to save itself by blaming our troubles — and its failures — on class enemies, turning general discontent into rage against a malign few.

From the Senate to the streets, it's working. Obama is too intelligent not to know what he started. But so long as it gives him a shot at reelection, he shows no sign of caring.

letters@charleskrauthammer.com

More from PostOpinions:

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Romney: How I'd handle China's cheating

Gerson: Obama, partisan in chief

Rubin: Why we need Marco Rubio

Lieberman: Romney's freedom of religion

Toles: Wall Street strikes back