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peanut46

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  1. I want to thank Adam Montana for this site. there has been alot of complaining going on here because he wont let cc just be posted without his permission. I listened to one last night that was not allowed on this site. I got the information about the call on here before it got pulled. I learned one thing and that is why he is so careful It was pumping you to buy more dinar and to get everyone you know to buy it. So I just wanted To Thank him for being so careful and caring that we do not get scamed HAPPY THANKSGIVING everyone
  2. Iraqi President officially assigns Maliki to form a government Thursday, November 25th 2010 11:33 AM Baghdad, Nov. 25 (AKnews) – A member of the National Coalition (NC) reported today that President Jalal Talabani has officially named Nouri al-Maliki as the Prime Minister, thus allocating to him the task of forming a government. The NC’s Ali al-Dabbagh told AKnews that the new Iraqi Prime Minister must now form a government within the constitutionally decreed 30-day time limit. Following his re-election to the Presidency on Nov. 11, Mr. Talabani informally announced that the NC leader and former PM, Nouri al-Maliki, would retain the premiership for a second term. Earlier this week Mr. Maliki asked all parliamentary blocs to nominate their candidates for the different ministries which will be allocated, in part, according to a point system based on the number of seats each bloc attained in the March 7 elections. Upon the introduction of the point, lawmakers were keen to assert that each nominee’s background, skills and experience will also play an important role in the selection process. Many of the blocs have already staked claims on the key Finance and Oil Ministries, indicating that the task of forming a cabinet that will satisfy the different factions on the Iraqi political arena is going to be something of a challenge. Reported by Wissam al-Jaff Rn/Ka/AKnews http://www.aknews.com/en/aknews/4/197613/
  3. Formal Nomination Gives Maliki 30 Days to Form GovernmentBy STEVEN LEE MYERS Published: November 25, 2010 Recommend Twitter Sign In to E-Mail Print Reprints Share Close LinkedinDiggMixxMySpaceYahoo! BuzzPermalink. BAGHDAD — Iraq’s president formally nominated Nuri Kamal al-Maliki for a second term as the country’s prime minister on Thursday, giving him 30 days to cobble together a government from competing factions that remain deeply divided and suspicious of his return to power. Enlarge This Image Iraqi Government, via Associated Press President Jalal Talabani, right, and Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki of Iraq during a ceremony on Thursday in Baghdad where Mr. Maliki was asked to form the next government. President Jalal Talabani first nominated Mr. Maliki when Iraq’s new Parliament met in a stormy session two weeks ago. But he delayed the formal designation required by the country’s constitution until Thursday to give Mr. Maliki the maximum amount of time to negotiate the competing demands of parliamentary blocs that covet leadership posts. Mr. Talabani, a Kurd who was re-elected two weeks ago, announced the nomination in a televised ceremony at his Peace Palace on the Tigris River. He was joined by leaders of all the major parties except Mr. Maliki’s main rival, Ayad Allawi, a Shiite whose coalition won the support of most of Iraq’s Sunnis. President Talabani called on Mr. Maliki to form “a new government that we hope will be a government of national partnership and will not exclude anyone.” It has been a long time coming. The elections for 325 members of the Council of Representative were held on March 7, but legal challenges and political squabbling delayed first the results and then the convening of Parliament through the summer and fall. Even if Mr. Maliki meets the 30-day deadline in late December — which is not a certainty, given the chronic disregard for legal deadlines in Iraqi politics — the country will have spent more than nine months under a caretaker government without a functioning legislature. Many of Iraq’s most critical needs — from basic services to investment — have remained unaddressed throughout the impasse. Mr. Maliki, 60, a Shiite first elected as a compromise prime minister in 2006, appealed for unity. Reading from written remarks, he urged the political leaders with him “to overcome the disputes from the past, to put them behind us and to open a new page of cooperation in building the country.” He said that the improvement in security was his greatest accomplishment in office, and emphasized the need to support the security forces “in their difficult mission” against an untamed insurgency. He did not mention the United States or its role assisting those forces. At the same time, Mr. Maliki appeared mindful of growing public frustration over the failure to improve basic services like electricity. “We want an active and qualified government to provide services to our people that we delayed for a long time,” he said. Mr. Maliki’s formal nomination begins what is expected to be another period of Byzantine jockeying for control of ministries and other agencies. Under the compromise agreement that returned Mr. Maliki to power, parliamentary leaders assigned points to each party based on the number of seats each won, as well as points to each position in the new government. The more senior posts in what are known as the “sovereign ministries” — overseeing foreign affairs, finance, oil and defense, for example — are worth more points than the service ministries, like health and agriculture Iraqi officials and political analysts, as well as media reports, describe the process as a bazaar, with power, influence and control of budgets being bartered over. “If the government allocates $7 billion to the Ministry of Culture today, tomorrow it will become a sovereign ministry,” Ibrahim al-Sumadaie, an unsuccessful candidate for parliament, said in an interview. “Everybody is after the money. Nobody cares about the ministry itself.” Still uncertain is the role of Mr. Allawi, whose coalition, Iraqiya, narrowly beat Mr. Maliki’s, winning 91 seats compared to 89. Under an agreement brokered by the Obama administration, Mr. Allawi was supposed to take over a committee on national security and other strategic issues whose authority remains ill-defined. On the night Parliament met two weeks ago, Mr. Allawi led a walkout of some of Iraqiya’s members, and then left the country, denouncing the agreement as still-born. He returned to Iraq on Wednesday, but continues to complain about the agreement, blaming Iran and others for blocking what he considers his rightful chance to be prime minister. “The last chapter in this tale is not over yet,” he said in an interview on Al Arabiya television on Monday. Yasmine Mousa, Yasir Ghazi and Zaid Thaker contributed reporting http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/26/world/middleeast/26iraq.html?ref=global-home
  4. Kuwaiti leadership congratulates Al-Maliki on gov''t formation assigning Politics 11/25/2010 4:58:00 PM KUWAIT, Nov 25 (KUNA) -- His Highness the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah sent a cable of congratulations on Thursday to Iraqi Prime Minister-designate Nouri Al-Maliki on the occasion of the latter's assigning to form a government. In the cable, HH the Amir wished all the best for Iraq and its people, hoping for the Arab country to regain its aspired role in the region. HH the Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah and His Highness the Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohammad Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah sent similar cables . (http://www.kuna.net.kw/NewsAgenciesPublicSite/ArticleDetails.aspx?id=2126859&Language=enend) hb KUNA 251658 Nov 10NNNN
  5. As good as that sounds we must not forget that God gave us something way more than money, he gave us his son to take away the sins of the world. He gave us a free gift that we could spend eternity in Heaven with him. So because we don't know what tomorrow hold for us, please ask him for forgiveness of your sins and ask him to be the Savior of you life. That would be the most valuable gift you ever receive. The RV might just be the second one. To me this is the best part of you post. I totally believe that God has had his hand in this from the day my husband said he was going to Iraq to help them. He did not have to go he served his time already, and we didnt even know about the dinar. He was told about it and for some reason thought that he would buy some. Told me to take care of someday it might be worth something or we would have pretty wallpaper. As for your bills give them over to him and he Will help you find the way to get them paid. When I came on this site I didnot realize that they were so many Christians here. I know alot of good will be done with the money these Christians will recieve. If you dont have a favorite church there are many ways to tithe. any where and anybody you help in his name I am sure he will be happy with Just make sure you pay it forward . I hope everyone has a very Happy Thanksgiving and thank you for the post. Also when it gets here dont for get to put CHRIST IN YOUR CHRISTMAS!!!!!
  6. This is yesterdays news and has been posted repeatly Please read None the less it is GREAT news
  7. Dear Warka Clients: Due to maintenance our MasterCard services will be unavailable during the maintenance period where once completed a post and message will be sent accordingly. We apologize for this inconvenience and appreciate your fine cooperation. Cards Department Warka Bank for Investment and Finance
  8. Blocs officially requested to name ministerial candidates Tuesday, November 23rd 2010 10:01 AM Baghdad, Nov. 23 (AKnews)- A leader form National Coalition (NC) said the Iraqi Prime Minister, Nouri al-Maliki has officially requested the blocs to name their candidates for the ministries in the new cabinet. Ali Adib from the NC, the Shia dominated and the largest parliamentary bloc, told AKnews Tuesday in a letter sent Monday the PM demanded each one of the winning blocs to nominate three candidates for each ministry and send in the their biographies, so that the "most qualified candidate" can be chosen. After he was re-elected, the Iraqi president, Jalal Talabani, mentioned he will assign Maliki to from the new cabinet and depending on that statement Maliki sent the official requests to the blocs, Adib said. However, according to the media reports the president will officially request Maliki Thursday. The Iraqi lawmakers elected Nov. 11 Talabani as the Iraqi president and Osama al-Nujaifi as the parliament speakers. The two deputies for the speaker were also elected. The president and the speaker both delivered their speeches after their election in parliament. The intense rivalry for the PM post delayed the government formation for eight months. Now that the impasse is seemingly over, the Iraqis are waiting to see how Maliki can handle the intense rivalry for the ministries, given that all the major blocs demand the senior ministries. The challenge may even get intensified if, according to the speculations, the ministries are reduced from 37 to 25. Reported by Wisam Jaf Lh/AKnews http://www.aknews.com/en/aknews/4/197067/ I have not seen this posted yet if it has mod please delete
  9. Thank you for the beautiful post And if it is time for you to leave I want to thank you for all you have done for Us. Have a wonderful Thanksgiving.
  10. Who said Steve1 Left DV He said he would be on vacation with his family for thanksgiving and post though somebody if he can You guys need to relax and let things play out. thank you viper for your post Heres hopeing everyone Has a wonderful thanksgiving.
  11. where is the ignore button I have tryed tofigure out how to do it but not sure how thanks
  12. Areyou saying His book has the date in it? hummmmmmmmmmm interesting
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