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Getting Passive Income Opportunities with emoneysystem


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Option 3 makes a dedicated facebook group about superiority EMS. Creating a Facebook support group for your team (if you already have a lot of referrals) AND / OR anyone else who might be interested in making money online. Similar to the facebook page, it must have some content about Ems in it. And at least 50 members of the group.

Making a choice of 4 blog post about the benefits of EMS. Explain the basic workings of the EMS include EMS banner. Use your own language. If you do not have a domain you can use a FREE blog platforms such as Blogger, etc.. Postage can be written in ANY language supported by Google Translator for the EMS to be able to understand it.

Please select one of the 4 options, choose which one you think is most easy you do. After that send a link page post that you make keDukungan EMS so later seen and approved by the EMS. But if there is some incorrect information the EMS will tell you what you should change, so there is no problem at all! $ 10 will be placed on your eWallet ems. Then FOLLOW 3 SIMPLE STEPS. STEP 1 Adding funds to your eWallet payment processor or sufficiently supported with $ 10 free on your eWallet ems. STEP 2 Order Ad Package. STEP 3 Each Ad Pack to make money for you every hour

15 Insurance Policies You Don't Need

Fear of the future sells insurance. Because we can't predict the future, we want to be ready to cover our financial needs if, or when, something bad happens. Insurance companies understand this fear and offer a variety of insurance policies designed to protect us from a host of calamities that range from disability to disease and everything in between. While none of us wants anything bad to happen, many of the potential catastrophes that happen in our lives are not worth insuring against. In this article, we'll take you through 15 policies that you're probably better off without.

1. Private Mortgage Insurance

The infamous private mortgage insurance (PMI) is well known to homeowners because it increases the amount of their monthly mortgage payments. PMI is an insurance policy that protects the lender against loss when lending to a higher-risk borrower. The borrower pays for this insurance but derives no benefit. Fortunately, there are several ways to avoid paying for this unnecessary policy. PMI is required if you purchase a home with a down payment of less than 20% of the home's value. The small down payment is viewed as putting you at risk of defaulting on the loan. Put down at least 20% and the PMI requirement goes away. Alternatively, you can put down 10% and take out two loans, one for 80% of the sale price of the property and one for 10%, although interests rates can prevent the economics of this maneuver from working out in the homeowner's favor.

2. Extended Warranties

Extended warranties are available on a host of appliances and electronics. From a consumer's perspective, they are rarely used, particularly on small items such as DVD players and radios. If you purchase a reputable, brand-name product, you can be fairly certain it will work as advertised and that the extended warranty is statistically likely to be unnecessary. If you spend $5,000 on a giant, flat-screen television, the policy is still unlikely to pay off, but might make you feel better. For everything else, forget it.

3. Automobile Collision

Collision insurance is designed to cover the cost of repairs to your vehicle if you are involved in an accident. If you have a loan out on the car, the loan issuer is likely to require that you have collision insurance. If your car is paid off, collision is optional; therefore, if you have enough money in the bank to cover the cost of a new car, collision insurance may be an unnecessary expense. This is particularly true if you are driving an old car, because cars depreciate so quickly that many vehicles are worth only a fraction of their purchase price by the time the loan is paid in full.

4. Rental Car Insurance

Most auto insurance policies offer additional coverage for the cost of car rentals, touting it as a useful feature if your car is ever involved in an accident and needs to spend some time in the repair shop. This may sound like a good idea, but in reality, most people rarely rent a car, and when they do, the cost is relatively low and hardly worth insuring against. Although rental car insurance is relatively inexpensive, amortized over the course of a lifetime you are still likely to spend far more than you will benefit.

5. Car Rental Damage Insurance

Many auto insurance policies already cover rentals, so there's no need to pay for this twice. Check your policy before you pay. Depending on where you rent the vehicle, you may also be able to pay a small fee for insurance on your rental when you pick it up at the rental center. If this fee is less than what you'd pay for a year in your old policy, choose the fee over the policy.

6. Flight Insurance

Flight insurance coverage is completely unnecessary. Despite media portrayal, airline accidents are relatively rare, and your life insurance policy should already provide coverage in the event of a catastrophe.

7. Water Line Coverage

Water companies have made an aggressive push to sell policies that cover the repair of the water line that runs from the street to your house. The odds are in your favor that you will never use this coverage, particularly if you live in a newer home. If you live an average suburban neighborhood and you do need to repair the water line, the distance to the street is short, the likelihood of a problem is low and repair costs are a few thousand dollars or less. The same goes for policies offered by other utility companies.

8. Life Insurance for Children

Life insurance is designed to provide a safety net for your heirs/dependents. Because children don't have heirs to worry about and, statistically speaking, most kids will grow up safe and healthy, most parents should not purchase life insurance for their kids. Instead, use the money that you would have spent on life insurance to fund an education plan or an individual retirement account (IRA).

9. Flood Insurance

Unless you live in a flood plain or an area with a history of water problems, don't even bother buying flood insurance. If none of the homes in the area has ever been flooded, yours is unlikely to be the first.

10. Credit Card Insurance

Purchasing coverage to pay your credit card bill in the event you cannot pay it is a waste of money. A far better idea is to avoid running up your credit cards in the first place, so you won't need to worry about the bills. Not only do you not save on the insurance premiums, you'll also save the interest on your debt.

11. Credit Card Loss Insurance

Federal law limits your liability if your credit card is stolen. Your out-of-pocket costs are limited to $50 per card and not a penny more. In fact, many credit card companies don't even try to collect the $50.

12. Mortgage Life Insurance

Mortgage life insurance pays off your house in the event of your death. Rather than add another policy - and another bill - to your list of insurance plans, it makes more sense to get a term-life policy instead. A good life insurance policy will provide enough money to pay off the mortgage and to cover other expenses as well. After all, the mortgage isn't the only bill your survivors will need to pay.

13. Unemployment Insurance

This coverage makes minimum payments on your bills if you are out of work, which sounds like an attractive proposition. A better plan is to save your money and build up an emergency fund instead. You won't have to cover the cost of the insurance policy and, if you are never out of work, you won't spend any money at all.

14. Disease Insurance

Policies are available to cover cancer, heart disease and other maladies. Instead of trying to identify every possible disease that you may encounter, get a good medical coverage policy instead. This way, your medical bills will be covered regardless of the problem you face.

15. Accidental-Death Insurance

Unless you are extraordinarily accident prone, an accident is unlikely. Major catastrophes such as car wrecks and fires are covered under other policies, as is any harm that comes to you while at work. Accidental-death policies are often fraught with stipulations that make them difficult to collect on, so skip the hassles and get life insurance instead.

When Choosing Insurance

There are so many policies to chose from, and they all cost money. While a certain amount of insurance coverage is necessary and prudent, you need to choose carefully. In general, broad policies that offer coverage for a multitude of potential events are a better choice than limited-scope policies that focus on specific diseases or potential incidents. Before you buy any policy, read it carefully to make sure that you understand the terms, coverage and costs. Don't sign on the dotted line until you are comfortable with the coverage and are sure that you need it.

Obama's tax record

Republicans portray President Obama as the tax-hiker-in-chief.
Obama portrays himself as a tax cutter for the masses but not the rich.
The truth isn't so cut and dry.
The fact is, the president's record on taxes is a mixed bag. In three-plus years in office, Obama has raised some taxes even as he has cut others.
The end result: Both sides get their election-year talking points, and families and businesses get a maze of temporary or soon-to-expire tax laws mixed in with some new ones on tap.
Low- and middle-income households: The president wants to make the Bush tax cuts permanent for anyone making less than $200,000 ($250,000 for couples). In the meantime, as part of a deal with Congress in December 2010, he supported a two-year extension of them through the end of this year.
Mostly in the context of stimulus, he created several new -- if temporary -- tax breaks. He has tried to make a few permanent, such as the Making Work Pay credit for families earning under $150,000. And he has backed the expansion of existing breaks, such as the earned income tax credit and the child tax credit.
Obama focuses State of the Union on income inequality
He lost the fight to permanently extend the Making Work Pay credit. But he gave his blessing to a temporary payroll tax cut that he is now seeking to extend through 2012.
Obama, however, also signed into law measures that would raise the tax burden for some in the middle class.
Specifically, he made it more expensive to smoke and look mahvelous by approving a federal tobacco tax hike and a new 10% tanning tax.
He also reduced how much one can put into a tax-advantaged flexible spending plan at work and raised the bar on how much one needs to accrue in medical bills before being allowed to deduct any medical expenses.
High-income households: The president makes no bones about wanting to raise taxes on the rich. At the same time, some of his tax proposals would also benefit them.
Take the Bush tax cuts, for example. Obama wants to let the top two income tax rates revert to 39.6% and 36%, up from 35% and 33% today. He also wants to increase the wealthy's capital gains and dividend rates to 20%, up from 15% now. And he would limit the value of their itemized deductions to 28% of the deductible item, below the 33% and 35% top rates they can use now.
But the wealthy would still benefit if the Bush tax cuts are preserved for everyone else, since some of their income is also taxed at the lower rates of 10%, 15%, 25% and 28%.
Obama's 30% millionaire tax
In addition, the 2010 tax deal that kept the Bush tax rates where they are for the middle class, did the same for the highest-income families. The deal also introduced the temporary payroll tax cut for everyone -- which Obama agreed to when he couldn't convince the GOP to extend the Making Work Pay Credit. That tax cut put more than $2,000 in the pockets of those making six figures or more in salary.
Lastly, relative to current law, which would impose higher rates on dividends and impose a more stringent estate tax, the rich would do somewhat better under Obama's proposals.
Obama favors an estate tax with a top rate of 45% and a $3.5 million exemption. That would hit estates harder than the rules in place today, but less hard than what those rules are scheduled to revert to if Congress does nothing.
In other ways, though, the president is aiming to impose new tax burdens on the rich to help pay for new programs like health care reform and reduce deficits.
Starting in 2013, wealthy taxpayers will have to pay more in Medicare tax, because a new surtax of 0.9% will be imposed on top of the 1.45% they already pay on their wages. And they will have to pay 3.8% on at least some of their investment income for the first time.
Lastly, though it's unlikely to pass as proposed, Obama wants to impose a so-called Buffett Rule to ensure that millionaires pay at least 30% of their income in federal taxes. In addition, last week he said that he'll propose eliminating deductions for millionaires that apply to their home, health care, retirement and child care.
Businesses: Here again, the president has a mixed record on the tax front. He has proposed -- and in some cases signed into law -- a bevy of discrete tax cuts aimed at small businesses and specific industries, such as manufacturing. He's also backed the extension of several temporary business deductions and credits.
At the same time, he has proposed or approved a list of tax increases aimed at health insurance companies, medical device manufacturers, oil and gas companies, and businesses that send jobs overseas, among others.
And last week he again proposed a fee on large banks, this time to pay for an expanded mortgage refinancing program.
The bottom line: Three things can be said with certainty about Obama's tax record. Democrats will tout his tax cuts. Republicans will lambast his tax hikes. And serious tax policy experts will continue to beat their head against the wall because the president has done nothing to simplify the code.
TaxVox blog editor Howard Gleckman coined the president's most recent tax proposals his "Tax Deform Agenda."
Indeed, said Chris Edwards, director of tax policy studies at the libertarian Cato Institute, "President Obama has a lousy record in terms of the making the tax code more complex."
Then again, so do both parties in Congress.
View this article on CNNMoney