I’m struggling to understand the reasoning behind this, much less the priorities that make the Louisiana legislature decide to make this move . Cold hard cash. It’s good everywhere you go, right? You can use it to pay for anything. But that’s not the case here in Louisiana now. It’s a law that was passed during this year’s busy legislative session. House bill 195 basically says those who buy and sell second hand goods cannot use cash to make those transactions, and it flew so far under the radar most businesses don’t even know about it. “We’re gonna lose a lot of business,” says Danny Guidry, who owns the Pioneer Trading Post in Lafayette. He deals in buying and selling unique second hand items. “We don’t want this cash transaction to be taken away from us. It’s an everyday transaction,” Guidry explains. Guidry says, “I think everyone in this business once they find out about it. They’re will definitely be a lot of uproar.” The law states those who buy or sell second hand goods are prohibited from using cash. State representative Rickey Hardy co-authored the bill. Hardy says, “they give a check or a cashiers money order, or electronic one of those three mechanisms is used.” Hardy says the bill is targeted at criminals who steal anything from copper to televisions, and sell them for a quick buck. Having a paper trail will make it easier for law enforcement. I don’t think this would hold up in court. Cash is legal tender of the United States government. How can a state legislature ban its usage? And frankly, I think the whole “helping the police” is a crock of bull. As banks start charging more and more fees for us to have the privilege of letting us access our money, I suspect that Rickey Hardy is doing a solid for his lobbyist buddies in the banking industry. h/t Balloon Juice
Continue reading …Today is World Food Day. It might, if one heeds the words of Ban Ki-moon, be more suitably designated Global Lack of Nutrition Day. For, according to a statement by the Secretary-General of the United Nations this weekend, in a world that can produce enough food to feed everyone, nearly a billion people will go hungry today. And that is one in seven of us. A welter of little-noticed reports have been published on the subject in the past week, notably a study of worldwide food insecurity by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). This estimated that a total of 925 million people were undernourished in 2010, two-thirds of whom lived in just seven countries – Bangladesh, China, the…
Continue reading …Today is World Food Day. It might, if one heeds the words of Ban Ki-moon, be more suitably designated Global Lack of Nutrition Day. For, according to a statement by the Secretary-General of the United Nations this weekend, in a world that can produce enough food to feed everyone, nearly a billion people will go hungry today. And that is one in seven of us. A welter of little-noticed reports have been published on the subject in the past week, notably a study of worldwide food insecurity by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). This estimated that a total of 925 million people were undernourished in 2010, two-thirds of whom lived in just seven countries – Bangladesh, China, the…
Continue reading …Rome is counting the cost of its worst violence in years, which erupted on a day of global protests over austerity and banking practices. Hundreds of hooded protesters in Italy’s capital torched cars, smashed bank windows and attacked a church. Saturday’s…
Continue reading …Rome is counting the cost of its worst violence in years, which erupted on a day of global protests over austerity and banking practices. Hundreds of hooded protesters in Italy’s capital torched cars, smashed bank windows and attacked a church. Saturday’s…
Continue reading …Article by WN.com Correspondent Dallas Darling. Just months before hundreds of thousands of Iranians toppled the U.S.-backed Shah of Iran, President Jimmy Carter was in Iran toasting and praising him. According to Carter, the Shah was a great leader and had established “an island of stability” in a “troubled” region of the world. “To you, Your Majesty,” proclaimed Carter, “the cause of human rights is one that also shared deeply by our people and by the leaders of our two nations…There is no leader with whom I have a deeper sense of personal friendship and gratitude.” While Carter continued to dine with the Shah of Iran, enjoying the most exquisite foods that were washed down with 25,000…
Continue reading …Article by WN.com Correspondent Dallas Darling. Just months before hundreds of thousands of Iranians toppled the U.S.-backed Shah of Iran, President Jimmy Carter was in Iran toasting and praising him. According to Carter, the Shah was a great leader and had established “an island of stability” in a “troubled” region of the world. “To you, Your Majesty,” proclaimed Carter, “the cause of human rights is one that also shared deeply by our people and by the leaders of our two nations…There is no leader with whom I have a deeper sense of personal friendship and gratitude.” While Carter continued to dine with the Shah of Iran, enjoying the most exquisite foods that were washed down with 25,000…
Continue reading …JERUSALEM—The elaborate machinery of a prisoner swap deal between two bitter enemies swung into motion early Tuesday, as hundreds of Palestinians and one Israeli soldier prepared to return home in one of the most dramatic recent developments in the otherwise deadlocked Israel-Palestinian conflict. Before dawn Tuesday, the first 96 inmates were moved from a prison in the south to another in the West Bank, where they were later to be released, a spokesman for Israel’s Prisons Service said. The Israel-Hamas deal, to take place Tuesday morning, is going ahead despite criticism and court appeals in Israel against the release of 1,027 Palestinians for a single captured Armored Corps…
Continue reading …JERUSALEM—The elaborate machinery of a prisoner swap deal between two bitter enemies swung into motion early Tuesday, as hundreds of Palestinians and one Israeli soldier prepared to return home in one of the most dramatic recent developments in the otherwise deadlocked Israel-Palestinian conflict. Before dawn Tuesday, the first 96 inmates were moved from a prison in the south to another in the West Bank, where they were later to be released, a spokesman for Israel’s Prisons Service said. The Israel-Hamas deal, to take place Tuesday morning, is going ahead despite criticism and court appeals in Israel against the release of 1,027 Palestinians for a single captured Armored Corps…
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