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  1. #1
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Obama’s Illegal Alien Financial Bonanza

    Barack Obama seems stuck on stupid

    Obama’s Illegal Alien Financial Bonanza

    By Jim Kouri
    Thursday, July 22, 2010

    Last week, the US Senate approved the most far-reaching expansion of Wall Street regulations and the financial industry since the Great Depression. Part of that expansion of government power is President Barack Obama naming three nominees to the board of the Federal Reserve Bank as it prepares to handle its vastly expanded duties “to ensure financial stability and oversee financial institutions.â€
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  2. #2
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    All part of the UN Agenda 21 on migration as described in the UN documents for the purpose of redistributing the world wealth.

    That is why Mexico calls the illegals "migrants" , it is condoned and encouraged by the UN.

    They encourage migration from poor countries to wealthy ones and redistribute the world wealth through remittances. The World Bank Tracks all of it and gets a fee also.

    If States put heafty fees on the remittances, they wouldn't have so much public debt from illegals.

    This is a little choppy, but the charts and links are at the link below.



    From The World Bank Site
    About this site
    This website provides data on the cost of sending and receiving small amounts of money from one country to another. Called remittances, these international transfers are often initiated by migrant workers. The aggregate cash flows and the number of participants are enormous. In fact, the World Bank estimates that remittances totaled $420 billion in 2009, of which $317 billion went to developing countries, involving some 192 million migrants or 3.0% of world population. The money received is an important source of family (and national) income in many developing economies, representing in some cases a very relevant percentage of the GDP of the receiving countries. The site covers 178 "country corridors" worldwide. The corridors studied flow from 24 major remittance sending countries to 85 receiving countries, representing more than 60% of total remittances to developing countries.

    The research and publication of remittance pricing worldwide serves four important purposes: benchmarking improvements, allowing comparisons among countries, supporting consumers’ choices, and putting pressure on service providers to improve their services. The World Bank enjoys a leading role in much of the global work on remittances and has supported a number of initiatives in the field. Learn more...




    Note: In some corridors, exchange rate information was not available for all the operators, and therefore prices in those corridors may be higher than the amount shown. For additional details refer to corridor-specific notes and explanations.
    The most and least costly "country corridors":
    $200$500
    Country Corridors
    Average cost in US$
    Top 5 (least costly):

    Singapore to Bangladesh
    4.48
    United Arab Emirates to Pakistan
    4.87
    Singapore to Philippines
    6.12
    United Arab Emirates to Sri Lanka
    6.29
    Malaysia to Philippines
    6.88
    Bottom 5 (most costly):

    Australia to Papua New Guinea
    43.32
    Tanzania to Rwanda
    40.78
    Brazil to Bolivia
    31.88
    United States to Brazil
    31.37
    United Kingdom to Rwanda
    30.72
    Compare all »


    Note: Cost includes the transaction fee and exchange rate margin. Only those corridors with a sufficient degree of transparency (i.e. all the relevant information was provided by all RSPs) are featured. Thus, for example, other corridors for which part of the information is not available or disclosed might result in practice more costly. Corridor averages are unweighted and do not reflect the market shares of the different firms that compose the average.
    Country Corridors
    Average cost in US$
    Top 5 (least costly):

    Singapore to Bangladesh
    6.19
    United Arab Emirates to Pakistan
    6.75
    Singapore to Philippines
    9.09
    United Arab Emirates to Sri Lanka
    9.13
    United Arab Emirates to Philippines
    10.08
    Bottom 5 (most costly):

    Australia to Papua New Guinea
    76.21
    United Kingdom to Brazil
    65.77
    United States to Brazil
    61.32
    Singapore to Pakistan
    57.25
    United Kingdom to Zimbabwe
    51.81
    Compare all »
    Note: Cost includes the transaction fee and exchange rate margin. Only those corridors with a sufficient degree of transparency (i.e. all the relevant information was provided by all RSPs) are featured. Thus, for example, other corridors for which part of the information is not available or disclosed might result in practice more costly. Corridor averages are unweighted and do not reflect the market shares of the different firms that compose the average.

    What's new
    In March 2010, Remittance Prices Worldwide published new data for the third time since the site was launched in September 2008. New corridors and features have been added Read more...

    Policy note
    New! Analysis of trends in the average total cost of migrant remittance services (PDF, 709KB)

    Featured websites
    General Principles for International Remittance Services
    World Bank Payment Systems and Remittances
    Bank for International Settlements
    Western Hemisphere Payments & Securities Settlement Forum
    Commonwealth of Independent States Payments Initiative
    World Bank's Migration and Remittances Team

    http://remittanceprices.worldbank.org/
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  3. #3
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    Re: Obama’s Illegal Alien Financial Bonanza

    [quote="AirborneSapper7"]Last week, the US Senate approved the most far-reaching expansion of Wall Street regulations and the financial industry since the Great Depression. Part of that expansion of government power is President Barack Obama naming three nominees to the board of the Federal Reserve Bank as it prepares to handle its vastly expanded duties “to ensure financial stability and oversee financial institutions.â€

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