Random Politics & Religion #00 |
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Random Politics & Religion #00
Haters gonna hate, Hillary didn't look that bad in her youth. Bill on the other hand.... whats going with that hair bro.
If you are into hippie lawyers that is.
Asura.Kingnobody said: » If you are into hippie lawyers that is. He's into "hippy" lawyers. Know what I mean? Eh? "Know what I mean," he asked him knowingly. Asura.Kingnobody said: » If you are into hippie lawyers that is. She can take my bar any time. WAKA WAKA https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2015/01/got-outrageous-public-records-story-send-your-nominations-foilies
Quote: Got an Outrageous Public Records Story? Send Your Nominations for “The Foilies” Fighting for government records is sometimes like: … a game of Battleship, but where you have to go to court to force your opponent to tell you whether you even grazed his aircraft carrier. … finding yourself at the doors of the Forty Thieves’ cave, except that you have to rap out “Open Sesame” in Morse code with your forehead just to get a peek at the treasure. … ordering a book from an online store then having to wait 10-30 days just to hear back that the store can neither confirm nor deny whether your item is in stock. … running the hurdles at the Olympics, but with Droid Kafka and his bureaucrobot army laying down new stretches of barricades every time you think you’re about to cross the finish line. Bahamut.Milamber said: » https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2015/01/got-outrageous-public-records-story-send-your-nominations-foilies Quote: Got an Outrageous Public Records Story? Send Your Nominations for “The Foilies” Fighting for government records is sometimes like: … a game of Battleship, but where you have to go to court to force your opponent to tell you whether you even grazed his aircraft carrier. … finding yourself at the doors of the Forty Thieves’ cave, except that you have to rap out “Open Sesame” in Morse code with your forehead just to get a peek at the treasure. … ordering a book from an online store then having to wait 10-30 days just to hear back that the store can neither confirm nor deny whether your item is in stock. … running the hurdles at the Olympics, but with Droid Kafka and his bureaucrobot army laying down new stretches of barricades every time you think you’re about to cross the finish line. One phone call to the Texas Comptroller's office or the county's courthouse and I pretty much have your life story that the state is legally bound to give. Mind you, I wouldn't get any of the good stuff (SSN, income, etc.) but I can find out where you were born, when, which hospital, who the doctor was, if your parents ever paid the bill to the hospital, and so on. I can even get information on if you are registered with the state and if you have the right to transact businesses in Texas, among other things. All you really need is a name and where the person lives. Asura.Kingnobody said: » I don't know about you, but I never had any issues with public records in Texas. I have to deal with it all of the time too. One phone call to the Texas Comptroller's office or the county's courthouse and I pretty much have your life story that the state is legally bound to give. Mind you, I wouldn't get any of the good stuff (SSN, income, etc.) but I can find out where you were born, when, which hospital, who the doctor was, if your parents ever paid the bill to the hospital, and so on. I can even get information on if you are registered with the state and if you have the right to transact businesses in Texas, among other things. All you really need is a name and where the person lives. Quote: You should feel free to name your own Foilies categories. For example, if the Department of Defense claimed a national security exemption in response to your FOIA request for lunch menus, you might suggest a category for “America’s Most Dangerous Cafeteria.” But we also have several categories already in mind, such as: Absurdly Over-Redacted Documents Egregious Copying Fees Extraordinarily Long Wait for Records Silly Legal Arguments in Public Records Lawsuits Wrongest-Headed Anti-transparency Legislation Gratuitous Glomars Bahamut.Kara said: » Asura.Kingnobody said: » I don't know about you, but I never had any issues with public records in Texas. I have to deal with it all of the time too. One phone call to the Texas Comptroller's office or the county's courthouse and I pretty much have your life story that the state is legally bound to give. Mind you, I wouldn't get any of the good stuff (SSN, income, etc.) but I can find out where you were born, when, which hospital, who the doctor was, if your parents ever paid the bill to the hospital, and so on. I can even get information on if you are registered with the state and if you have the right to transact businesses in Texas, among other things. All you really need is a name and where the person lives. Quote: You should feel free to name your own Foilies categories. For example, if the Department of Defense claimed a national security exemption in response to your FOIA request for lunch menus, you might suggest a category for “America’s Most Dangerous Cafeteria.” But we also have several categories already in mind, such as: Absurdly Over-Redacted Documents Egregious Copying Fees Extraordinarily Long Wait for Records Silly Legal Arguments in Public Records Lawsuits Wrongest-Headed Anti-transparency Legislation Gratuitous Glomars Probably once, twice a year. Longest I waited was by the end of the workday. It helps out a lot if you talk to the clerk respectfully and answer with "sir" or "ma'am" often. Quote: Egregious Copying Fees In the state of CT if you want a copy of the past 4 years of your drivers record, you can't get any further then that for some reason in CT it is 25 dollars for 1 piece of printed paper. In Ct they also believe in a thing called property tax on vehicles, so if you was to buy a brand new or used car and pay it off, you still got to pay twice a year " for the privilege to drive it even if you own it". Its not like that for every state, some have different laws regarding that on community lvls. I asked where does the the money go to? I was told to fix roads, i then asked why does CT have one of the highest taxes on gas? i agreed THAT was to fix roads. I then asked why do a lot of CT roads have so much damage since it seems our tax dollars seem to not fix them fast enough when we pay to never see results to put state workers to work on that task. I was never given a answer. a prime example of taxation without proper representation. rp&r page 213 Let Freedom Reign rp&r page 216 The Law That Never Was the 16th amendment. rp&r page 223 The Constitutional Republic known as the USA. Asura.Kingnobody said: » It helps out a lot if you talk to the clerk respectfully and answer with "sir" or "ma'am" often. And damnit Chrome, genuflectory is a word. Go look it up. Siren.Lordgrim said: » Quote: Egregious Copying Fees In the state of CT if you want a copy of the past 4 years of your drivers record, you can't get any further then that for some reason in CT it is 25 dollars for 1 piece of printed paper. B) Add "Statue of Limitations" on the growing list of things Lordgrim doesn't know. Heh, one benefit if I ever need to get documents from my local courthouse: I know one of the clerks.
Bahamut.Milamber said: » Asura.Kingnobody said: » It helps out a lot if you talk to the clerk respectfully and answer with "sir" or "ma'am" often. And damnit Chrome, genuflectory is a word. Go look it up. Most of the time you can tell on the phone, but if you have a question, just ask the agent to repeat their name by saying "I'm sorry, I missed your name, it's Mr./Mrs.?" That way, I know which gender I'm talking to. You people think that's annoying.
Try dealing with medical records. "Well, yes, your release is technically HIPAA-compliant but we require you go above and beyond this so kiss off." *arrg* Medical record clerks are born bitchy. I swear. Ramyrez said: » You people think that's annoying. Try dealing with medical records. "Well, yes, your release is technically HIPAA-compliant but we require you go above and beyond this so kiss off." *arrg* Medical record clerks are born bitchy. I swear. You just made that clerk do some work! Asura.Kingnobody said: » Lawsuit documents, yes, although not very often thankfully. Got to know what to report on returns, especially when it involves the Texas SOS or Tax Court. Probably once, twice a year. Longest I waited was by the end of the workday. It helps out a lot if you talk to the clerk respectfully and answer with "sir" or "ma'am" often. One example Quote: Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, are charging nearly 10 times the cost of some of their own employees' salaries before they will agree to turn over files under public records laws about the fatal shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown. The city has demanded high fees to produce copies of records that, under Missouri law, it could give away free if it determined the material was in the public's interest to see. Instead, in some cases, the city has demanded high fees with little explanation or cost breakdown. In one case, it billed The Associated Press $135 an hour — for nearly a day's work — merely to retrieve a handful of email accounts since the shooting. That fee compares with an entry-level, hourly salary of $13.90 in the city clerk's office, and it didn't include costs to review the emails or release them. ... The Washington Post was told it would need to pay $200 at minimum for its requests, including city officials' emails since Aug. 9 discussing Brown's shooting, citizen complaints against Ferguson officers and Wilson's personnel file. The website Buzzfeed requested in part emails and memos among city officials about Ferguson's traffic-citation policies and changes to local elections, but was told it would cost unspecified thousands of dollars to fulfill. Inquiries about Ferguson's public records requests were referred to the city's attorney, Stephanie Karr, who declined to respond to repeated interview requests from the AP since earlier this month. Through a spokesman late Monday, Karr said Missouri law can require fees but she didn't address why charges specific to the AP's request were nearly tenfold the lowest salary in the city clerk's office. Karr said searching emails for key words constitutes "extra computer programming" that can bring added costs. article Ramyrez said: » You people think that's annoying. Try dealing with medical records. "Well, yes, your release is technically HIPAA-compliant but we require you go above and beyond this so kiss off." *arrg* Medical record clerks are born bitchy. I swear. Bahamut.Kara said: » Asura.Kingnobody said: » Lawsuit documents, yes, although not very often thankfully. Got to know what to report on returns, especially when it involves the Texas SOS or Tax Court. Probably once, twice a year. Longest I waited was by the end of the workday. It helps out a lot if you talk to the clerk respectfully and answer with "sir" or "ma'am" often. One example Quote: Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, are charging nearly 10 times the cost of some of their own employees' salaries before they will agree to turn over files under public records laws about the fatal shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown. The city has demanded high fees to produce copies of records that, under Missouri law, it could give away free if it determined the material was in the public's interest to see. Instead, in some cases, the city has demanded high fees with little explanation or cost breakdown. In one case, it billed The Associated Press $135 an hour — for nearly a day's work — merely to retrieve a handful of email accounts since the shooting. That fee compares with an entry-level, hourly salary of $13.90 in the city clerk's office, and it didn't include costs to review the emails or release them. ... The Washington Post was told it would need to pay $200 at minimum for its requests, including city officials' emails since Aug. 9 discussing Brown's shooting, citizen complaints against Ferguson officers and Wilson's personnel file. The website Buzzfeed requested in part emails and memos among city officials about Ferguson's traffic-citation policies and changes to local elections, but was told it would cost unspecified thousands of dollars to fulfill. Inquiries about Ferguson's public records requests were referred to the city's attorney, Stephanie Karr, who declined to respond to repeated interview requests from the AP since earlier this month. Through a spokesman late Monday, Karr said Missouri law can require fees but she didn't address why charges specific to the AP's request were nearly tenfold the lowest salary in the city clerk's office. Karr said searching emails for key words constitutes "extra computer programming" that can bring added costs. article Every county in Texas has an online registry for appraisal and property tax values. If you knew my name, you can look up the Bexar County Tax office and find out the value of my home and how much property taxes I paid last year. That's one of the joys of living in Texas, and nobody gives a ***how much their neighbors' house is appraised at (it's never right). Asura.Kingnobody said: » Every county in Texas has an online registry for appraisal and property tax values. If you knew my name, you can look up the Bexar County Tax office and find out the value of my home and how much property taxes I paid last year. That's one of the joys of living in Texas, and nobody gives a ***how much their neighbors' house is appraised at (it's never right). Not sure about online but FL you could access that information, as well. It's considered public information, iirc. Boliga.dk (requires understanding danish or using dictionary) you can see every property purchased in Denmark, many previous sales (going back a few decades, but some of the properties are a few hundred years old), property value compared to property in same area, etc. This is not a state run website, those you can get more precise information from. Jetackuu said: » I can attest to this, try working with them. They go out of their way to not know things, I swear. *calls to get something refaxed beacuse pages were missing* "Yes, I was wondering if you could please refax these records, they didn't come through completely." "We never got your request." "You already sent them to me..." "I've got no record of receiving that request." "YOUR NAME IS ON THE COVER SHEET OF THE PARTIAL TRANSMISSION." "Oh. That. Okay, I'll do what I can." *headdesk* Ramyrez said: » Jetackuu said: » I can attest to this, try working with them. They go out of their way to not know things, I swear. *calls to get something refaxed beacuse pages were missing* "Yes, I was wondering if you could please refax these records, they didn't come through completely." "We never got your request." "You already sent them to me..." "I've got no record of receiving that request." "YOUR NAME IS ON THE COVER SHEET OF THE PARTIAL TRANSMISSION." "Oh. That. Okay, I'll do what I can." *headdesk* Bahamut.Kara said: » Asura.Kingnobody said: » Every county in Texas has an online registry for appraisal and property tax values. If you knew my name, you can look up the Bexar County Tax office and find out the value of my home and how much property taxes I paid last year. That's one of the joys of living in Texas, and nobody gives a ***how much their neighbors' house is appraised at (it's never right). Not sure about online but FL you could access that information, as well. It's considered pulic information, iirc. Boliga.dk (requires understanding danish or using dictionary) you can see every property purchased in Denmark, many previous sales, property value compared to property in same area, etc. This is not a state run website, those you can get more precise information from. I hate having to call my clients to ask for HUD statements only to find out that they either "never received one" (which is bull) or "don't know what I'm talking about." Lucky for me those excuses only happen during tax season....well ***. Bahamut.Milamber said: » Welcome to the 1980-90s? The medical field's numerous advancements in terms of treatment rarely reflects in the office technology. There are health systems out there that use electronic record systems, but they have their own host of hoops through which you need to jump that are equally irritating, just in different ways. But many individual doctors' offices demand faxes or -- worse still -- won't take ANYTHING electronically and demand a mailed request with a wet-signed signature. Electronic authorizations are no good to them! Because electronic could be fake, but a wet signature they didn't see signed couldn't possibly be fake! HIPAA, while good for some things, can make working with medical records very, very irritating. And as stated, some places are so deathly afraid of HIPAA violations that they go so far above and beyond the requirements it's painful. Obama unveils new foreign policy of "Strategic Patience".
One generally calls for patience AFTER a plan of action has been implemented. Having patience before you do anything isn't really patience, it's procrastination. What a joke. Ramyrez said: » Bahamut.Milamber said: » Welcome to the 1980-90s? The medical field's numerous advancements in terms of treatment rarely reflects in the office technology. There are health systems out there that use electronic record systems, but they have their own host of hoops through which you need to jump that are equally irritating, just in different ways. But many individual doctors' offices demand faxes or -- worse still -- won't take ANYTHING electronically and demand a mailed request with a wet-signed signature. Electronic authorizations are no good to them! Because electronic could be fake, but a wet signature they didn't see signed couldn't possibly be fake! HIPAA, while good for some things, can make working with medical records very, very irritating. And as stated, some places are so deathly afraid of HIPAA violations that they go so far above and beyond the requirements it's painful. I'm so glad the local hospital is almost fully EMR compliant, and the reason I say almost is because some of the partnered practices hadn't converted yet, I believe they may be now, which is cool. Yes there are issues with digital copies, but the risk of that in comparison to the benefit of EMR is worth it in most opinions. Ragnarok.Nausi said: » Obama unveils new foreign policy of "Strategic Patience". One generally calls for patience AFTER a plan of action has been implemented. Having patience before you do anything isn't really patience, it's procrastination. What a joke. Ragnarok.Nausi said: » Obama unveils new foreign policy of "Strategic Patience". One generally calls for patience AFTER a plan of action has been implemented. Having patience before you do anything isn't really patience, it's procrastination. What a joke. Ramyrez said: » Bahamut.Milamber said: » Welcome to the 1980-90s? The medical field's numerous advancements in terms of treatment rarely reflects in the office technology. There are health systems out there that use electronic record systems, but they have their own host of hoops through which you need to jump that are equally irritating, just in different ways. But many individual doctors' offices demand faxes or -- worse still -- won't take ANYTHING electronically and demand a mailed request with a wet-signed signature. Electronic authorizations are no good to them! Because electronic could be fake, but a wet signature they didn't see signed couldn't possibly be fake! Go into the doctor's office. Swipe my card. Sit in the waiting room, usually for about 15minutes (I usually plan to arrive at least 10 minutes early for transit). Doctor calls my name, go in, talk, get examined, blood taken and tests run (if checking for bacterial infection)/referred to specialist if further investigation/clarification is needed, and have a short discussion about danish medical terms and how my danish is doing. Usually exiting at about 20 minutes after seeing the doctor. If I need a prescription, I go to the drugstore, swipe my card, get a number, get called up, get a short introduction to the medicine if I need it from, pay, and leave. I can honestly say that I've never experienced the like with regards to level of care and efficiency in the US. I'd usually spend the total amount of time I use for the above just filling out paperwork, then waiting in the waiting room just to see the doctor. |
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