Wednesday, March 31, 2010

HAVE A GOOD WEDNESDAY!!!!!

The Kid Daytona ft.Amanda Diva "lately"



Damn this song truly puts me in that good feeling.










My sobriety, celebacy

Celibacy is defined as the lifestyle of someone who is, and is striving to remain. It'll all started out as a bet, amongts friends. To see if I could go without sex for three months (as if I was getting it in in the first place) but I excepted the challange like a soldier. And sixth months later I remain strong in my quest to acomplish a goal that I wanted for the bet that was put on me to do. But do belive I'm not doing this to brag or for show, this is truly a beautiful reminder that in life, I must have respect for myself.

Being celebate is tough, you have to be mentally strong, spirtually grounded or just ease yourself, every morning and think about why your doing this. It's a mind thing but as people we do have needs, and for that I still resest. This is more than a bet this is my way to gain enternal closeness with myself, and life. There's no need for celebacy rings or pledges, just until the right one come along I'll be able to offer more than just some good dick and money (rarley have the money part lol) but I can offer my woman something real, something that would entice her mind.

j.cole did it again!

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Elzhi "deep"



One of those songs that touch your soul, Hip Hop is alive and well!













drake performs "over"

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Barack Obama signs landmark US healthcare bill into law

US President Barack Obama has signed his landmark healthcare bill into law in a ceremony at the White House.

The new law will eventually extend health insurance cover to about 32 million Americans who currently do not have any.

Mr Obama said he was signing the bill for people like his mother "who argued with insurance companies even as she battled cancer in her final days".

The bill is strongly opposed by the Republicans, who say it is too costly.

Immediately after the signing, attorneys general from 13 states - 12 Republicans and one Democrat - began legal proceedings against the federal government seeking to stop the reforms on the grounds that they are unconstitutional.

Mr Obama was joined at the White House signing ceremony by healthcare reform supporters including Democrats from both Houses of Congress who supported the measure.

He said the bill's provisions were "desperately needed", adding: "The bill I'm signing will set in motion reforms that generations of Americans have fought for and marched for and hungered to see."

He hailed the "historic leadership and uncommon courage" of the Democratic leadership in Congress that secured the bill's passage, singling out House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid for particular praise.

He concluded: "Today after almost a century of trial, today after over a year of debate, today after all the votes have been tallied, health insurance reform becomes law in the United States of America. Today.

"All of the overheated rhetoric over reform will finally confront the reality of reform."

Mr Obama now has to sell the reforms to a divided American public before November's mid-term elections.

On Thursday, he will go to the state of Iowa to talk about how the new law will help to lower healthcare costs for small businesses and families.

After a heated debate, the House of Representatives voted 219-212 late on Sunday to send the 10-year, $938bn bill to Mr Obama. Not one Republican voted for the bill, and some Democrats also voted against it.

The measure, which the Senate passed in December, is expected to expand health insurance coverage to about 95% of eligible Americans, compared with the 83% covered today.

It will ban insurance company practices such as denying coverage to people with existing medical problems.

Correspondents say the bill represents the biggest expansion of the federal government's social safety net since President Lyndon Johnson enacted the Medicare and Medicaid government-funded healthcare programmes for the elderly and poor in the 1960s.

Mr Obama's campaign to overhaul US healthcare seemed stalled in January, when a Republican won a special election to fill the late Edward Kennedy's Massachusetts Senate seat, and with it, enough Republican votes to prevent the bill from coming to a final vote in the Senate.

But Democrats came up with a plan that required the House to approve the Senate-passed measure - despite its opposition to many of its provisions - and then have both chambers pass a measure incorporating numerous changes after the president signed it into law.

KEY HEALTHCARE REFORMS
Cost: $940bn over 10 years; would reduce deficit by $143bn

Coverage: Expanded to 32m currently uninsured Americans

Medicare: Prescription drug coverage gap closed; affected over-65s receive rebate and discount on brand name drugs

Medicaid: Expanded to include families under 65 with gross income of up to 133% of federal poverty level and childless adults

Insurance reforms: Insurers can no longer deny coverage to those with pre-existing conditions

Insurance exchanges: Uninsured and self-employed able to purchase insurance through state-based exchanges
Subsidies: Low-income individuals and families wanting to purchase own health insurance eligible for subsidies

Individual Mandate: Those not covered by Medicaid or Medicare must be insured or face fine

High-cost insurance: Employers offering workers pricier plans subject to tax on excess premium

"The bill I'm signing will set in motion reforms that generations of Americans have fought for and marched for and hungered to see"

President Barack Obama

by bbc news