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jeremy l

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  • 96 chevy truck won't start 5.7 vortec?

    got gas on monday and drove about a mile or twotruck died . pulled over it started but every time i pushed the gas pedal it would die . i idled to a garage and they scanned the computer and said the cam and crank sensor out of sync and it was the timing chain . pulled it to uncles garage we when we got it there it would not start at all . changed timing chain and both sensors (cam and crank). still won't start it has fuel and fire. when i crank it it sounds like the older models when the timing needed adjusted at the distributor. but on the 96 models turning the distributor does nothing for the timing..checked the gas there is no contaminates present

    IF YOU DON'T KNOW ABOUT THIS MODEL PLEASE DON'T ANSWER

    6 AnswersChevrolet1 decade ago
  • Do believe this is a questionable tactic in questioning suspected terrorists ?

    Waterboarding involves strapping a person down and pouring water over his or her cloth-covered face to create the sensation of drowning. Critics call it a form of torture.

    8 AnswersLaw & Ethics1 decade ago
  • Do you feel like the government is taking away our freedom , one law at a time?

    and how many americans would stand against the gov when the time comes to take control back?

    3 AnswersLaw & Ethics1 decade ago
  • anyone watching cnn?

    please remember it was the clintons that started the nafta plan which put millions of american jobs overseas. how many of you lost your jobs to outsourcing...... i did? (don't buy whirlpool refrigerators)

    5 AnswersPolitics1 decade ago
  • Why do companies get away with this kind of crap?

    While the national headlines focus on efforts across the country to force Wal-Mart to pay more for its workers’ health insurance, an obscure story in Missouri reveals just how “sick” Wal-Mart’s health care policies can be. The story involves a former Wal-Mart worker who received some medical care benefits from Wal-Mart, but now the retailer, which made $10 billion in profits last year, is suing the disabled worker to get the company's money back. According to the St. Louis Post Dispatch, last June Wal-Mart decided to sue Debbie Shank, who stocked shelves at night at a Wal-Mart in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, so she could spend the days with her three kids. Debbie was in her minivan in 2000 when she was hit by a truck. She suffered severe brain stem damage, and has been left totally disabled. After the accident, her Wal-Mart health insurance paid for her medical care. But when Debbie sued the trucking company, and won a financial settlement of roughly $900,000, Wal-Mart decided it wanted Debbie to pay Wal-Mart back. But Debbie’s husband says the money they received from the lawsuit has been used to set up a trust fund to help pay for Debbie's care, since she now requires expensive nursing home care. Wal-Mart says it has a legal right to try to recoup its medical expenses from Shank, once she won her lawsuit. "This is a very sad case, and I think many people naturally have an emotional and sympathetic reaction," a Wal-Mart spokeswoman told the Post-Dispatch. "But the reality is that we are required to protect the assets of our health plan so that it can pay the future claims of other associates and their family members. Unfortunately, it's just not feasible to start making individual exceptions.” But Wal-Mart knows that to the public, it will appear that they are trying to get money from a disabled woman, her three children, and her husband. Shank is confined to a nursing home, and will not work again, and cannot financially help her family out by working nights at Wal-Mart. So Wal-Mart is worried that its lawsuit against a disabled woman will not seem right. “Not everyone will understand this,” the company spokesman admitted, “and I'm sure that we will get a fair amount of criticism." Debbie Shank’s lawyer said, “If somebody got some money from a lawsuit and used it to buy a new home they didn't need or a European vacation ... that's one thing. But that's not the situation we're dealing with here. In view of the unfavorable publicity that Wal-Mart is getting around the country ...I'm surprised they're pursuing this against their former employee, particularly since she remains so devastated and so in need of these funds." Shank’s husband, Jim, says his wife is still so mentally confused that she can’t always identify which son she is talking to, and that she is wheelchair bound, and, due to her brain stem injury, can only move one arm and two fingers. The Shank family got around $417,477 from the lawsuit, and that money was put into a trust to pay for Shank’s future medical bills, which will be very substantial. But Wal-Mart wants to get their medical expenses back, so they can deposit them in the company’s Health and Welfare Plan. Shank says that if his wife loses her case to Wal-Mart, she will lose more than money. She will lose her private room at the nursing home, her wheelchair-accessible van and the personal care worker who helps her with her activities of daily living. Jim Shank has health insurance, which pays for some of his wife’s on-going medical bills. Shank works at several jobs to make ends meet, including real estate sales, and work at a local department store.

    10 AnswersLaw & Ethics1 decade ago
  • is the rebel flag so bad?

    it doesn't stand for slavery it stands for our right to fight the government if need be so

    16 AnswersPolitics1 decade ago