Liberty Very
Posted in Uncategorized on 05/08/2010 09:57 am by admin
Liberty Very
![]() |
![]() 1851 Seated Liberty Half Dime VERY NICE US $2.35
|
![]() 1854 Seated Liberty Half Dime VERY NICE US $6.76
|
![]() 1857 Seated Liberty Half Dime VERY NICE US $2.80
|
![]() 1858 Seated Liberty Half Dime VERY NICE US $3.31
|
![]() 1930 S Standing Liberty Quarter Very nice details US $2.99
|
![]() 1908 Very Good Partial Liberty Indian Head Penny Cent Coin US $1.50
|
Tutorial, How to Use the Latest Liberty Reserve Debit Card
Over the past year Liberty Reserve has become a very popular payment system and has approximately 4,000 new account holders sign up per day. I felt it was necessary to write a tutorial on the latest Liberty Reserve Debit Card which offers you a convenient and instant way to access your funds using Liberty Reserve. I will assume you, like me, make money online using the Liberty Reserve payment system. I had a need for instant access to my Liberty reserve funds and I would like to show you with a quick tutorial how to use the latest
Liberty Reserve Instant Load able Debit card.
Liberty Reserve quick reference;
Liberty Reserve is an online payment system and provider of digital gold currency (LR-gold). They are an offshore company incorporated in Costa Rica, launching their USD backed digital currency (LR-USD) in 2002 and they also have a Euro backed digital currency (LR-EUR). Their gold backed digital currency was launched in 2005.
Back in June of 2008 a company called DGC Community was in Development and created the Internet's first "instant load able" Liberty Reserve Debit Card.
Google search "DGC Community". Click on the top link of the search engine results to navigate to their homepage. If you are confused by the search engine result simply go to dgccommunity.com.
Here is a quick explanation of what the DGC Community web site is;
Digital Gold Currency Community web site is a dedicated team of professionals who provide the most current information about the Digital Gold Economy. They blog the most recent news about the ever changing Digital Gold Currency Industry. Their sources are mainly derived from credible online news articles.
Their blogs contain news and sometimes personal opinion. They are your single source for the latest online news regarding C-gold, E-gold, E-bullion, iGolder, Liberty Reserve, Pecunix, Perfect Money, WebMoney and much more! Included in their community you can also find articles about Freedom, Privacy and Gold.
They are dedicated to keeping members informed of every single aspect of the Digital Gold Economy. Digital Gold Currency Community is a unique concept by enclosing within the web site a custom made Instant Load Debit Card platform. Using this platform you can Instantly load a Offshore Visa Debit Card they provide free with your paid membership. Their preferred member payment of choice is Liberty Reserve USD. Once you sign up, they provide you the tools needed to make a substantial monthly profit with a Debit Card platform referral program.
Membership benefits;
* 2 year subscription.
* Pay for your membership using Liberty Reserve USD.
* You get unlimited access to the latest news, blogs and Internet articles regarding the Digital Gold Economy.
* You get a Free Instant Load able Antigua Prepaid Visa Electronic Debit Card using Liberty Reserve USD.
* Fund your Instant Load able Antigua Prepaid Visa Electronic Debit Card using Liberty Reserve USD.
* You get Free Fedex ground shipping of your Prepaid Visa Electronic Debit Card, tracking number included.
* Refer someone new and get a 10% bonus on Sign Up Membership fees, and Liberty Reserve USD Debit Card loading fees.
Now, lets go through the sign up process;
Once you are at the main index page of the web site click on the "Instant Load Liberty Reserve Debit Card Visa" logo on the top right.
This will take you to the join page of the web site. Next you will create your Username: and your Password: which will allow you to gain access to the site after you have paid. Next you will be transferred to the Liberty Reserve secure payment gateway. This is where you will pay to become a member of DGC Community which makes you eligible to receive a FREE Instant Load able Liberty Reserve Debit Card. If you want to pay later DGC Community automatically sends a payment link to your email address which has a 24 hour validity.
Once you have paid through the Liberty Reserve payment module you have instant access to DGC Community. You will need to check your email as DGC Community sends your password to access the web site instantly after payment has been made.
To login;
Now, go to the main index of the DGC Community web site. Located on the top right you will see a link Existing Members: Please login. Enter your Username and Password sent to you by email. When you pay for access to DGC Community you get a 2 year subscription to their web site. DGC Community will ship your Instant Load able Liberty Reserve Debit Card after you login and click "Activate Card". You will enter your name and shipping details in the "Activate Card" form to receive your FREE Liberty Reserve Debit Card.
From the form you will also upload one form of ID "Passport or Drivers License". It is my understanding that Visa requires all financial institutions to obtain, verify and record information that identifies each person who holds a Visa issued Debit Card.
Once you have filled in the appropriate information in "Activate Card" DGC Community will notify you by email and ship your Liberty Reserve Debit Card FREE via FEDEX, tracking number included. My Liberty Reserve Debit card arrived in less than 7 days Internationally.
After you receive your Liberty Reserve Debit Card;
Login to DGC Community and click "Fund My Card". You can now instantly load $1,000.00 Daily / $7,000.00 Weekly / $30,000.00 Monthly using the Liberty Reserve US Dollar payment module.
A good way to make money and get paid to your Liberty Reserve US Dollar account is to join the DGC Community referral program. Below is a quick overview how I make additional money using the Liberty Reserve Debit Card.
* Join Digital Gold Currency Community you will get a custom referral URL.
* Custom banners are included in the member area to assist your referral campaign.
* When you refer someone to the web site you receive 10% bonus on Sign Up Membership fees, and Liberty Reserve USD Debit Card loading fees.
* You are paid the same bonuses for anyone they refer, and anyone those people refer 3x's level deep!
* All referrals are paid to you at the end of every month direct to your Liberty Reserve USD account.
* Your referral bonuses could easily pay all your own Debit Card fees and then go on to return a substantial ongoing monthly profit.
Thank you for reading my tutorial on using the Liberty Reserve Debit Card. I hope you enjoy using the Visa Debit Card and instant access to your Liberty Reserve funds as much as I do!
Please see link http://www.dgccommunity.com/ for access.
About the Author
|
|
On Liberty $20.66 1880. John Stuart Mill is one of the foremost representatives of utilitarian thought as well as one of the most influential of nineteenth century liberals. Influenced by his wife, Harriet Taylor, Mill developed a very humane version of utilitarianism that was sympathetic to women's rights, labor unions, proportional representation, and other liberal themes. Contents: Of the liberty of thought and discussion; Of Individuality, As One of the Elements of Well-Being; Of the Limits to the Authority of Society Over the Individual and Applications. See the many other works by this author available from Kessinger Publishing. |
|
|
Liberty $7.99 On a quiet park bench in Manhattan---just miles from the ruins of the World Trade Center---spymaster Jake Janos Illin delivers a chilling secret message to Jake Grafton: A rogue Russian general has sold four nuclear warheads to a radical Islamic terrorist group, the Sword of Islam. The group intends to detonate them in America in the ultimate terror strike, the apocalypse that will trigger a holy war between Western civilization and the Muslim world. After passing Illin’s message to his superiors, Grafton is charged by the president with the task of assembling a secret team to find the warheads before America’s population centers are consumed by a nuclear holocaust. As he hunts for the terrorists, Grafton soon finds himself up to his neck in power politics, techno-billionaires, money-grubbing traitors, anarchists, and spies. He also discovers that the terrorists don’t all come from the Middle East. They come from places close to home. They masquerade as patriots. Some may even have the president’s ear. With the survival of Western civilization at stake, Grafton pulls out all the stops. Calling on the assistance of the indomitable Toad Tarkington, and CIA burglar Tommy Carmellini, he raids the prisons to assemble his team while the clock ticks toward Armageddon. Peopled with the rich, vivid characters that have made Stephen Coonts famous worldwide, Liberty is all action and suspense from the very first page. And it poses the unanswerable question: How far should civilization go to defend itself from its mortal enemies? |
|
|
At Liberty $19.99 At Liberty |
|
|
Denying Liberty $30.88 In 1865, ten year old Veronique was allowed to attend a dinner party at her grandfather's home near Versailles, France. At this affair, her grandfather proposed a gift for America that was destined to become the Statue of Liberty. How could Veronique have ever known that, from that moment, her life and that of the statue would become intertwined for over three decades? This is the story of Liberty's and Veronique's journeys to America. Liberty's arrival will precede that of Veronique's and while Liberty may have been rejected by Americans at first, she would eventually be welcomed by hundreds of thousands of people on the day of her unveiling. Fifteen years later in the year 1901, Veronique certainly is not expecting such a welcoming. No, Veronique, with only her son, intends to enter America very quietly and with very questionable travel documentation. She is hopeful that her admittance into America will be allowed because of her special relationship with Liberty. And she is keenly aware that her entry into America could be blocked by her ancestral heritage - a secret which she must be careful not to reveal to the Immigration Inspector. Veronique arrives at Ellis Island intent on securing her passage into America by claiming she is the visage of Liberty - that she was, in fact, the model for the statue. Immigration Inspector Patrick Leary is totally enthralled by her story; but ultimately he must decide is it believable? It will be his decision alone that determines whether America will be "Denying Liberty." |
|
|
Liberty and Freedom $5.04 Liberty and freedom: Americans agree that these values are fundamental to our nation, but what do they mean? How have their meanings changed through time? In this new volume of cultural history, David Hackett Fischer shows how these varying ideas form an intertwined strand that runs through the core of American life. Fischer examines liberty and freedom not as philosophical or political abstractions, but as folkways and popular beliefs deeply embedded in American culture. Tocqueville called them "habits of the heart." From the earliest colonies, Americans have shared ideals of liberty and freedom, but with very different meanings. Like DNA these ideas have transformed and recombined in each generation. The book arose from Fischer's discovery that the words themselves had differing origins: the Latinate "liberty" implied separation and independence. The root meaning of "freedom" (akin to "friend") connoted attachment: the rights of belonging in a community of freepeople. The tension between the two senses has been a source of conflict and creativity throughout American history. Liberty & Freedom studies the folk history of those ideas through more than 400 visions, images, and symbols. It begins with the American Revolution, and explores the meaning of New England's Liberty Tree, Pennsylvania's Liberty Bells, Carolina's Liberty Crescent, and "Don't Tread on Me" rattlesnakes. In the new republic, the search for a common American symbol gave new meaning to Yankee Doodle, Uncle Sam, Miss Liberty, and many other icons. In the Civil War, Americans divided over liberty and freedom. Afterward, new universal visions were invented by people who had formerly been excluded from a free society--African Americans, American Indians, and immigrants. The twentieth century saw liberty and freedom tested by enemies and contested at home, yet it brought the greatest outpouring of new visions, from Franklin Roosevelt's Four Freedoms to Martin Luther King's "dream" to Janis Joplin's "nothin' left to lose." Illustrated in full color with a rich variety of images, Liberty and Freedom is, literally, an eye-opening work of history--stimulating, large-spirited, and ultimately, inspiring. |
|
|
The Trouble with Liberty $3.95 "If he's guilty, he'll probably go to jail," Mom pointed out. "At the very least he'll lose his job, and maybe even his license to teach." "That if he's guilty," Dad said with emphasis. "What do you mean 'if'?" Cody exploded. "There's no if about it Liberty said he tried to rape her. Don't you think she would know?" Liberty Hayes has just moved to Sutter's Crossing and is the talk of the town. She has plenty of money and everyone wants to be her friend. When Liberty accuses a male teacher of sexually assaulting her, the rumors start. Val, her new best friend, is torn between believing Liberty and trusting her old friend Ryan when it comes to the truth. What is the trouble with Liberty? Kristin Butcher is a former teacher turned writer and reviewer. The Trouble With Liberty is her second Orca Soundings title. Her first, The Hemingway Tradition, garnered rave reviews. |
|
|
Empire for Liberty $24.95 How could the United States, a nation founded on the principles of liberty and equality, have produced Abu Ghraib, torture memos, Plamegate, and warrantless wiretaps? Did America set out to become an empire? And if so, how has it reconciled its imperialism--and in some cases, its crimes--with the idea of liberty so forcefully expressed in the Declaration of Independence? Empire for Liberty tells the story of men who used the rhetoric of liberty to further their imperial ambitions, and reveals that the quest for empire has guided the nation's architects from the very beginning--and continues to do so today. Historian Richard Immerman paints nuanced portraits of six exceptional public figures who manifestly influenced the course of American empire: Benjamin Franklin, John Quincy Adams, William Henry Seward, Henry Cabot Lodge, John Foster Dulles, and Paul Wolfowitz. Each played a pivotal role as empire builder and, with the exception of Adams, did so without occupying the presidency. Taking readers from the founding of the republic to the Global War on Terror, Immerman shows how each individual's influence arose from a keen sensitivity to the concerns of his times; how the trajectory of American empire was relentless if not straight; and how these shrewd and powerful individuals shaped their rhetoric about liberty to suit their needs. But as Immerman demonstrates in this timely and provocative book, liberty and empire were on a collision course. And in the Global War on Terror and the occupation of Iraq, they violently collided. |
|
|
The Constitution of Liberty $26.64 Working after the war, Hayek's writing was very much against the tide of mainstream Keynesian economic thought. But in the 1970s and 1980s - the eras of Thatcherism and Reaganomics - he was championed as a prophet of neo-liberalism by those who were seeking to revolutionize the post-war social consensus. The Constitution of Liberty is crucial reading for all those seeking to understand ideas that have become the orthodoxy in the age of the globalized economy. |
|
|
Liberty's Crusade $7.99 Far in the future, 60,000 light-years from Earth, a loose confederacy of Terran exiles is locked in battle with the enigmatic Protoss and the ruthless Zerg Swarm. Each species struggles to ensure its own survival among the stars in a war that will herald the beginning of mankind's greatest chapter -- or foretell its violent, bloody end. Danny Liberty was a good reporter...too good. When his investigations struck too close to the heart of the corrupt Terran Confederacy, he faced a simple choice: continue his current series of exposés, or take a hazardous new assignment covering the Marines on the front lines of the Koprulu Sector. It didn't take him long to decide.... Behind the attacks of the Zerg and the Protoss lies the story of a lifetime, but every piece of information blurs the mystery further. Thrown into the middle of a war where the outcome will determine mankind's very survival, the only thing that Danny Liberty knows for sure is that the only person he can trust to keep him alive is himself. Liberty's Crusade The first in an epic new series of space warfare novels set in the world of the bestselling computer game! |
|
|
Liberty and Learning $11 Fifty years ago, Milton Friedman had the ground-breaking idea to improve public education with school vouchers. By separating government financing of education from government administration of schools, Friedman argued, parents at all income levels would have the freedom to choose the schools their children attend.. Liberty & Learning is a collection of essays from the nation's top education experts evaluating the progress of Friedman's innovative idea and reflecting on its merits in the 21st century. The book also contains a special prologue and epilogue by Milton Friedman himself. The contributors to this volume take a variety of approaches to Friedman's voucher idea. All of them assess the merit of Friedman's plan through an energetic, contemporary perspective, though some authors take a theoretical position, while others employ a very pragmatic approach. |
|
|
The Story of the Statue of Liberty $3.94 "Written for the youngest audience...the text is very simple yet manages to convey all the major events in Liberty's creation....The full-color watercolors show amazing detail and are extremely rich."--Horn Book. |
|
|
Of Liberty and Necessity $49.95 In Of Liberty and Necessity James A. Harris presents the first comprehensive account of the free will problem in eighteenth-century British philosophy. Harris proposes new interpretations of the positions of familiar figures such as Locke, Hume, Edwards, and Reid. He also gives careful attention to writers such as William King, Samuel Clarke, Anthony Collins, Lord Kames, James Beattie, David Hartley, Joseph Priestley, and Dugald Stewart, who, while well-known in theeighteenth century, have since been largely ignored by historians of philosophy. Through detailed textual analysis, and by making precise use of a variety of different contexts, Harris elucidates the contribution that each of these writers makes to the eighteenth-century discussion of the will and its freedom. In this period, the question of the nature of human freedom is posed principally in terms of the influence of motives upon the will. On one side of the debate are those who believe that we are free in our choices. A motive, these philosophers believe, constitutes a reason to act in a particular way, but it is up to us which motive we act upon. On the other side of the debate are those who believe that, on the contrary, there is no such thing as freedom of choice. According to thesephilosophers, one motive is always intrinsically stronger than the rest and so is the one that must determine choice. Several important issues are raised as this disagreement is explored and developed, including the nature of motives, the value of 'indifference' to the will's freedom, the distinction between'moral' and 'physical' necessity, the relation between the will and the understanding, and the internal coherence of the concept of freedom of will.One of Harris's primary objectives is to place this debate in the context of the eighteenth-century concern with replicating in the mental sphere what Newton had achieved in the philosophy of nature. All of the philosophers discussed in Of Liberty and Necessity conceive of themselves as 'experimental' reasoners, and, when examining the will, focus primarily upon what experience reveals about the influence of motives upon choice. The nature and significance of introspection is thereforeat the very centre of the free will problem in this period, as is the question of what can legitimately be inferred from observable regularities in human behaviour. |
|
|
The Price of Liberty $9.99 In a bracing work of history, a leading international finance expert reveals how our national security depends on our financial security More than two centuries ago, America's first secretary of the treasury, Alexander Hamilton, identified the Revolutionary War debt as a threat to the nation's creditworthiness and its very existence. In response, he established financial principles for securing the country--principles that endure to this day. In this provocative history, Robert D. Hormats, one of America's leading experts on international finance, shows how leaders from Madison and Lincoln to FDR and Reagan have followed Hamilton's ideals, from the greenback and a progressive income tax to the Victory Bond and Victory Garden campaigns and cost-sharing with allies. Drawing on these historical lessons, Hormats argues that the rampant borrowing to pay for the war in Iraq and the short-sighted tax cuts in the face of a long-term war on terrorism run counter to American tradition and place our country's security in peril. To meet the threats facing us, Hormats contends, we must significantly realign our economic policies--on taxes, Social Security, Medicare, and oil dependency--to safeguard our liberty and our future. |
|
|
America/Liberty $9.99 America: Dispatched on a trial run, NASA's SuperAegis satellite has been created as the foundation of an international antimissle defense system. But moments after dispatch, it vanishes. Rear Admiral Jake Grafton fears something worse than a grave malfunction--he suspects sabotage... The USS America --the world's most technically advanced nuclear submarine--is launched on its maiden voyage. Then shortly after steaming out of harbor, the unthinkable happens. Pirated by terrorists, America disappears beneath the roiling waves of the Atlantic, its Tomahawk warheads aimed directly at the United States... An ingeniously calculated war has been waged--but the rouge enemy is far more insidious than Jake Grafton ever imagined. His mission: ferret out the core group responsible, overtake the stealth sub, and destroy it. But times is running out, and the race is on for Grafton to blow the covert operation out of the water before an entire nation is brought to its knees.   Liberty: On a quiet park bench in Manhattan---just miles from the ruins of the World Trade Center---spymaster Jake Janos Illin delivers a chilling secret message to Jake Grafton: A rogue Russian general has sold four nuclear warheads to a radical Islamic terrorist group, the Sword of Islam. The group intends to detonate them in America in the ultimate terror strike, the apocalypse that will trigger a holy war between Western civilization and the Muslim world. After passing Illin’s message to his superiors, Grafton is charged by the president with the task of assembling a secret team to find the warheads before America’s population centers are consumed by a nuclear holocaust. As he hunts for the terrorists, Grafton soon finds himself up to his neck in power politics, techno-billionaires, money-grubbing traitors, anarchists, and spies. He also discovers that the terrorists don’t all come from the Middle East. They come from places close to home. They masquerade as patriots. Some may even have the president’s ear. With the survival of Western civilization at stake, Grafton pulls out all the stops. Calling on the assistance of the indomitable Toad Tarkington, and CIA burglar Tommy Carmellini, he raids the prisons to assemble his team while the clock ticks toward Armageddon. Peopled with the rich, vivid characters that have made Stephen Coonts famous worldwide, Liberty is all action and suspense from the very first page. And it poses the unanswerable question: How far should civilization go to defend itself from its mortal enemies? |
|
|
The Liberty Book of Home Sewing $24.39 Crafters and fashion lovers will be lining up to get their hands on the very first sewing book from internationally popular and uber-stylish textile brand Liberty. Brimming with lavish photographs of bold, graphic fabrics, The Liberty Book of Home Sewing offers 25 irresistible and easy-to-make projects that allow readers to incorporate a touch of Liberty elegance into their home. Simple enough for beginners, the projects range from feminine totes and aprons to handy pincushions and book covers, full-sized quilts, chic throws, plush cushions, and more. With color step-by-step illustrations, detailed instructions, and plenty of inspiration, plus an exquisite fabric cover, this enchantingly beautiful book will be treasured by longtime Liberty fans and young crafters alike. |


US $150.00
































































































