Hospitals & Asylums
September
2006
$1 trillion Balanced Account Deficit HA-26-9-06
The US is facing a $1,240 billion
account deficit for FY2006. This is the
third year the account deficit is above $1 trillion. If Congress can levy the forfeiture of $100 billion from defense
reserves and $100 billion from the Old Age Survivor Trust Fund in this last
week of FY 2006 the budget deficit can be reduced to the manageable amount of
$211 billion. If the US exchanges their
foreign assistance for both export credit and debt forgiveness from the UN the
US can reduce their account deficit another $66 billion whereas the $33 billion
in official development assistance is in such demand that international
creditors and exporters will give this money full credit particularly if it is
sealed with the first quarterly installment of $3 billion war reparations to
Afghanistan. If the aforementioned
reforms are made a total of $266 billion in savings could bring the US
permanently below the $1 trillion account deficit level of the past three years
this FY2006. In any case the strategy
in this Act gives Congress firm guidance on bettering the President’s trade and
budget policies FY2007. Congress is
sought to establish a $1 million fund for reasonable $1,000 payments for
research balancing the budget and international trade.
On 20 September 2006 I received a response from the American Bar
Association Central European and Eurasian Law Initiative (ABA/CEELI) that
stated, “Thank you very much for expressing interest in the employment
opportunities with the American Bar Association Central European and Eurasian
Law Initiative (ABA/CEELI)”. In pursuit
of a trip to Central Europe and Eurasia that would help my career in
international development I am
proposing to CEELI to draft a concept paper identifying and discussing primary
issues of law relevant to Central Asia and Eastern Europe prior to the drafting
process whereby the ABA’s strategy of in depth political opinion surveys would
be conducted in Central Asian and Eastern European Bars regarding the
establishment of an International Tribunal for Central Asia and Eastern Europe
in the Hague where the ICTY once contracted with everyone’s local secret police
officer. The paper will set forth alternative solutions to the issues raised
and provide information regarding current trends in the law, such as national
economic development and prison population. The final paper will be written by
working groups consisting of U.S. and foreign experts in the particular field
of international development and human rights.
Hearing AID Act of 2007 HA-20-9-06
This year the World Summit appears to be cancelled. The High-level Dialogue on International
Migration and Development United Nations General Assembly will be held 14-15
September 2006, the Midterm Comprehensive Global Review of the Program of
Action for the Least Developed Countries for the Decade 2000-2010 18-19
September and the General Debate 19-29 September are to be held without the
auspice of the World Summit.
Countercyclical, technical and UN Charter Amendment issues are addressed
in this fourth draft. The major development of the year is the
publication of the 5 regional chapters of the SUN that is balanced annually
in one compehensible table. The reforms caused by this review will bring
proportional distributive justice to the UN system making the most significant
changes in the amount of aid flow to India and China out of respect for their
status as most populous and developing.
Consideration will be increased for least developed nations in Africa
and also in America and Asia, proportionally through the allocation of
international social security funding where it is needed most.
Although in some areas the number of poor people are increasing the world as a whole is on track to meet the target
of cutting in half the proportion of people living on a dollar a day or less by
2015.
Every year in September, the leaders of the world gather for two weeks
in New York for the general debate, normally called the World Summit, which
kicks off the United Nations General Assembly session. The 2006 debate begins
on 19 September, and over the course of ten days, more than 80 Heads of State
and Government will address the Assembly. Some of the themes to be debated
include the issue of Darfur, the Middle East conflict, HIV/AIDS, climate change
and development, as well as the selection of the next Secretary-General. The United Nations should provide the
leadership within the community of multilateral organizations to help the
poorer nations develop the capacity to profit from globalization and the
knowledge revolution. Global developments reiterate the universal validity of
the need to respect human rights and personal freedoms of individuals as basic
prerequisites to the freedom of nations.
Chapter
XII of the UN Charter: International Taxation System HA-16-9-06
Holocaust Prevention HA-13-9-06
"Each individual State has the responsibility to protect its
populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against
humanity", declared the Outcome Document adopted by the United Nations at
the 2005 World Summit in September. Historically, genocide and crimes against
humanity had an uneasy relationship. Genocide required physical destruction of
an ethnic group, while crimes against humanity spoke to a spectrum of acts of
persecution, falling short of extermination. The Completion Strategy (S/2002/678) called
on the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and the
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) to take all possible measures
to complete investigations by the end of 2004, to complete all trial activities
at first instance by the end of 2008, and to complete all work in 2010.
Bank Afghanistan Day HA-9-11-06
On this fifth anniversary of the suicide attacks that knocked down the World Trade Center in New York City and crashed into the Pentagon in Washington DC we remember the innocent civilians who died and the emergency professionals who perished in the collapse of the WTC. Although it is true the US suffered a terrorist attack in this day in 2001 the US did their fair share bombings in the War on Terrorism. Following my estimates and in the spirit of my draft constitution the US settled $20 billion that was matched with $13 billion at the Madrid conference in September 2003. It is time to bring Bank Afghanistan Day in time with the 9-11 tragedy so that the message that accompanies their $20 billion US is clearly opposed to terrorism. After the London Conference on Afghanistan international development assistance available for Afghanistan National Development Strategy from March 2006 increased to $10,500 million, $4 billion from the US. The US owes another $8 billion for reparations and reconstruction before settling into 50 years at a rate of $1.6 billion annually.
Hospitals & Asylums v.
Health Alliance HA-9-9-06
Case regarding 15 days of unlawful
restraint in a psychiatric hospital.
Deals with the ethical issue of payment with welfare fraud case loans by
the Secretary of Health and Human Services and discipline of the
conspirators. Makes plans for an
estimated $25 million investment in community housing by the Health Alliance to
overcome psychiatric hospital bed surplus.
Calls for the slavery free Probate Court to change their name to Justice
of the Peace. Arranges for the Board of
Mental Health to oversee all psychiatric hospitalizations with timely and
resourceful hearings. Makes plans to
discontinue the consumption of psychiatric medication until such a time when
smoke stopping is voluntary. Calls for
the settlement of the social security claim for $1,000 a month retroactive
through 2003 for $15,000 back pay. Lays
down a $250,000 social security settlement for Health Alliance by 23 September
2006 in apology for this false arrest of Hospitals & Asylums that increases
to a $1 million professional settlement, if delinquent.
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