Birbirinden ateşli özbek sex videolarına hemen sizde izlemeye başlayın. Yeni fantazi olan eşli seks ile ilgili içeriklerimiz ilginizi çekebilir. Çeşitli sekreter türk içerikleri son derece heyecanlandırıcı ve zevk verici duruyor. İnternet ortamında güvenilir bir depolama sistemi olan dosya yükle adresimiz sizleri için sorunsuz bir şekilde aktif durumda. Hiç bir bilsiyar keysiz kalmasın diye özel bir indirim Windows 10 Pro Lisans Key Satın Al kampanyasına mutlaka göz atın. Android cihazlarda Dream League Soccer 2020 hileli apk ile beraber sizler de sınırsız oyun keyfine hemen dahil olun. Popüler oyun olan Clash Royale apk indir ile tüm bombaları ücretsiz erişim imkanını kaçırmayın. Sosyal medya üzerinden facebook beğenisi satın al adresi sizlere büyük bir popülerlik katmanıza imkan sağlamaktadır. Erotik kadınlardan oluşan canlı sex numaraları sizlere eğlenceye davet ediyor. Bağlantı sağladığınız bayanlara sex sohbet etmekte dilediğiniz gibi özgürsünüz. Dilediğiniz zaman arayabileceğiniz sex telefon numaraları ile zevkin doruklarına çıkın. Kadınların birbirleri ile yarış yaptığı canlı sohbet hattı hizmeti sayesinde fantazi dünyanız büyük ölçüde gelişecek. Sizlerde hemen bir tık uzağınızda olan sex hattı hizmetine başvurarak arama yapmaya başlayın. İnternet ortamında bulamayacağınız kadın telefon numaraları sitemiz üzerinden hemen erişime bağlı bir şekilde ulaşın. Whatsapp üzerinden sıcak sohbetler için whatsapp sex hattı ile bayanların sohbetine katılabilirsin. Erotik telefonda sohbet ile sitemizde ki beğendiğiniz kadına hemen ulaşın. Alo Sex Numaraları kadınlarına ücretsiz bir şekilde bağlan!
supertotobet superbetin marsbahis kolaybet interbahis online casino siteleri bonus veren siteler
We are the Liberal Blog From Hollywood
L.A.'s Premier Post Facility

Film / Movie Quality Control Reports


Hot Pics & Gossip.

Archive for September 28th, 2011

Will the Solyndra Witch-Hunt Hurt Venture Capital Investments in Clean Energy?

Posted in Main Blog (All Posts) on September 28th, 2011 4:37 am by HL

Will the Solyndra Witch-Hunt Hurt Venture Capital Investments in Clean Energy?
With most of the coverage of the Solyndra bankruptcy focused on the political theater in Washington, there has been very little response from within the financial community — particularly in the venture capital space. I found out why upon talking to people about the issue. After reaching out to some of the top private equity […]

With most of the coverage of the Solyndra bankruptcy focused on the political theater in Washington, there has been very little response from within the financial community — particularly in the venture capital space.

I found out why upon talking to people about the issue. After reaching out to some of the top private equity firms and venture capitalists in cleantech, almost no one wanted to speak on the record about Solyndra. Many had friends who lost money in the deal; others just weren’t comfortable talking about such a politically-charged topic, preferring to lay low and stay out of the mess entirely.

But off the record, they all said basically the same thing:  While hitting home runs in clean energy is still difficult, the market fundamentals over the medium and long term (i.e. climate change, need for infrastructure investments, dramatically falling cost of renewables, etc) are still as compelling as they always were. No amount of hype about the Solyndra bankruptcy or political posturing in Washington will deter VCs from addressing those market needs.

After all, venture investments are inherently risky. A venture firm will make 10 bets expecting 9 to fail and hoping the one big success will make up for all the other failures.

“That’s just the way venture capital works. I don’t see it likely or reasonable that Solyndra will cause venture firms to pull back in this space,” explained Ken Locklin, managing director for the private equity firm Impax Asset Management, in an interview with Climate Progress. “I would be surprised if anyone in the venture community pulls back in a big way because of this.”

But this sector is tough, and other experts think it could have a short-term impact.

The Solyndra bankruptcy illustrates what more investors are coming to realize:  Clean energy is a very capital intensive business.

“It’s not easy to create a whole new production system for a commoditized product. It turned out that this whole sector requires a lot of money and is very technologically challenging. As a result, the speed of exits and the levels of those exits haven’t been fast enough for some investors,” said Locklin.

Because of the difficulties in hitting home runs in cleantech, investors have pulled back a bit. In the first quarter of 2011, venture investments in cleantech fell 44% compared with the first quarter of 2010. VCs are also being more cautious. Of the $1.1 billion invested in the U.S. cleantech sector in the second quarter, 67% went to later-stage companies.

So given that dynamic, will venture firms be able to raise the money they need to make investments in the clean energy? And will entrepreneurs be able to rely on venture capital?

Rob Day, a partner the private equity firm Black Coral Capital, worries that Solyndra may, in the near term, undermine the appetite of individuals, pension funds and other money managers (the so-called limited partners, or LPs) that invest in venture funds. Writing on Greentech Media’s cleantech investing blog, Day laments the potential impact on these investors:

[A]mong LPs who were already increasingly skeptical of cleantech venture capital, this is just going to further dissuade them. I’ve spoken with a few cleantech VCs lately who are out there raising funds and have spoken with LPs….

When Solyndra is the visible poster child for what “cleantech venture capital” is perceived to be, and then it blows up and becomes a political football — that’s not exactly a recipe for pension fund LP comfort.

This is all going to make it more difficult for cleantech VCs to raise funding from LPs, and thus it’s going to make it harder for cleantech startups to raise funding from either VCs or non-dilutive sources.

It’s hard to say how — or if — Solyndra will have a specific impact on investment. From my conversations, venture investors clearly believe firmly in the market drivers. But Solyndra’s bankruptcy is representative of the major financial risk in a constantly-changing, capital intensive sector like solar.

While concerned about the short-term impact, Day believes it won’t change the long-term picture:

It will come back. The core needs are too severe. The corporate momentum is too significant. The entrepreneurial energy is too inspired. But thanks to this episode with Solyndra and with other shoes yet to drop, the sector may have to develop some successes over the next couple of years in spite of the politicians — and in spite of the LPs.

In the meantime, entrepreneurs in clean energy may want to look beyond the big venture capital firms.

73 Percent Of Americans Support The ?Buffett Rule,? Including Two-Thirds Of Republicans
Every demographic sub-group supports President Obama’s proposed tax increase on the wealthy — known as the “Buffett Rule” — including two-thirds of Republicans, more than half of self-identified Tea Party members, and nearly three-fourths of those who make more than $100,000 a year. Overall, the Buffett Rule receives 73 percent approval, according to a new […]

Every demographic sub-group supports President Obama’s proposed tax increase on the wealthy — known as the “Buffett Rule” — including two-thirds of Republicans, more than half of self-identified Tea Party members, and nearly three-fourths of those who make more than $100,000 a year. Overall, the Buffett Rule receives 73 percent approval, according to a new Daily Kos/SEIU “State of the Nation” poll conducted by Public Policy Polling and released today. Republicans have labeled the increase as “class warfare,” despite the fact that the richest Americans continue to see their incomes rise and their tax rates plummet.


Investment in failed solar firm Solyndra raises questions about nonprofit’s purpose

Posted in Main Blog (All Posts) on September 28th, 2011 4:36 am by HL

Investment in failed solar firm Solyndra raises questions about nonprofit’s purpose

Six years ago, Senate Finance Committee investigators mounted an inquiry into an exotic variety of nonprofit organization that they feared affluent families were using to warehouse wealth while simultaneously earning themselves lucrative tax breaks.

One nonprofit group singled out for scrutiny was a low-profile organization based in Tulsa. That group, the George Kaiser Family Foundation, later became the biggest investor in Solyndra, the solar company that collapsed last month after burning through a half-billion dollars in taxpayer money.

Read full article >>

Promoting jobs bill in Denver, Obama highlights $60 billion for schools

DENVER — As he has barnstormed the country to promote the American Jobs Act, President Obama has made the case that spending money now will pay off later for the United States’ global productivity and competitiveness. And one of the biggest investments he is proposing comes in education.

Obama’s $447 billion jobs package includes $30 billion to renovate high schools and community colleges nationwide, and an additional $30 billion to help local jurisdictions hire and retain teachers.

Read full article >>

Budget chief won’t rule out more sacrifice for federal workers

Federal workers could be asked to sacrifice more than they already have to help reduce the deficit, budget chief Jack J. Lew said Tuesday.

“I can’t say nothing else will happen regarding the federal workforce,” Lew said in remarks at the nonprofit Partnership for Public Service in Washington, where he was speaking to agency managers about how to cut the size of government.

Read full article >>


Recapture Future LBJ Saw for America

Posted in Main Blog (All Posts) on September 28th, 2011 4:31 am by HL

Recapture Future LBJ Saw for America
Jesse Jackson, Chicago Sun-Times
Poverty is spreading in America. The numbers are numbing: 46 million people in poverty, a record number, one out of every seven Americans. Nearly 50 million go without health insurance. There are fewer payroll jobs now than in 2000. The income of a typical household is down nearly 7 percent since 2007. And the number of working poor is skyrocketing, as good jobs get shipped abroad. About 40 percent of all the jobs in the U.S. are low-income jobs.And inequality has reached new extremes. According to Goldman Sachs, the richest 1 percent of the country earned as much last year as the bottom 60…

A Short History of the Income Tax
John Steele Gordon, Wall Street Journal
Whether the “millionaires and billionaires” are actually paying their fair share of taxes is a matter for the electorate to decide. After all, fairness is hardly an objective standard.Before the modern era, however, the federal tax system was manifestly unfair by any reasonable standard, grossly biased in favor of the well off. Ironically, attempting to fix that unfairness is what has brought us to the present moment, with a federal tax system that is grotesquely complex, often arbitrary, and corrupted by mutual back-scratching between members of Congress and influential lobbyists.

Dems Facing a Bigger Wipeout Than 2010?
Peter Wehner, Commentary
Here’s yet more good news for Democrats. National Journal reports:One of the Democratic party’s leading pollsters [Stanley Greenberg] released a survey of 60 Republican-held battleground districts today, painting an ominous picture for congressional Democrats in 2012. The poll shows Democratic House candidates faring worse than they did in the 2010 midterms, being dragged down by an unpopular president who would lose to both Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Mitt Romney.