You have heard of all of the positive things that can happen when you start an affiliate marketing website to make money online but have you heard the negative effects of it? There are a few things that can stop a website dead in the water if you dont know what you are doing. Here are a few tips so that you will aid you in your search to find that perfect business for you and how to make it thrive in todays sluggish economy because there is still a lot of money to be made and everyone wants to get apart of the money to be made.
This blog went live five years ago today. I have updated our FAQ to reflect the changes since the last update of the FAQ. As always on these occasions, I’d like to thank the commenters, the lurkers, the trolls, all of the bloggers who have linked to us over the years, and everyone else who has spent even a bit of their valuable time at Lawyers, Guns and Money. We deeply appreciate, and we all thank you for making LGM what it is today.
At this point, knowing that the North Koreans are facing hard limits on fissile material, wouldn’t it make sense just to dare them to conduct additional nuclear tests? Read the rest of this entry »
Guest post by Shaun Connell
Let me explain how to make money online using a method I started in September of last year: building a blog, putting an advertisement on it (I get paid a dollar or so every time the ad is clicked), and then getting traffic from a search engine.
This is also known as SEO ranking your website on the search engines.
I just finished reading Karen Greenberg’s excellent The Least Worst Place: Guantanamo’s First 100 Days, a book that is (for obvious reasons) relevant to the hyperventilating spasms currently being mistaken for a “debate” about what to do with the crown jewel of Bush administration lawlessness. It takes a more narrow approach to questions of law, detention and interrogation than recent work by Jane Mayer or Philippe Sands — whose books serve well as companions to Greenberg’s — but the book is a valuable reminder of why the facility (and the legal theories that gave birth to it) need to dismantled as soon as possible.
The market is slightly higher in early trading, after a solid session yesterday. The leading sectors so far today are energy and materials, as a weak dollar today is boosting commodity prices.
This is probably the best NYT correction ever:
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Randy Paul has been writing an excellent series on medical professionals and torture, stemming from his attendance of a symposium on the subject two weeks ago. Long story short, “enhanced interrogations” often require the presence of a medical professional in order to make sure that the person who is definitely not being tortured doesn’t, you know, die. Randy notes that there is a bill floating through the New York State Assembly intended to create consequences for medical professionals who participate in such interrogations. Physicians for Human Rights has a petition in support of the bill; check it out. Read the rest of this entry »