woooo ---- weeee looked up that book in Amazon
The 'Customers who bought this item also bought' and 'Sponsored products related to this item' is the best example of the right wing wackjob press I've seen in a while.
The icing on the cake was
'Investigative reporter Luke Rosiak is being hailed as “one of the smartest, most diligent reporters in Washington” (TUCKER CARLSON) and “a bulldog” (DANA LOESCH) for uncovering “what is possibly the largest scandal and coverup in the history of the United States House of Representatives” (NEWT GINGRICH). '
three traitors for sure.
Call Kentucky Department of Insurance (800-595-6053 Option 1).
Health insurance sold in Kentucky must follow the regulations set out in the Affordable Care Act, the biggest being the 10 Essential Benefits (https://www.healthcare.gov/coverage/what-marketplace-plans-cover). One of those is emergency room services. The ACA also prohibited caps on coverage. These regulations apply to all health insurance plans, not just ones sold on healthcare.gov. Unless you are trying to use your gap coverage (Aflac and the likes), in which case those regulations don't apply.
Call the DOI and talk to their investigators. Don't let your insurance company get away with breaking the law.
Source: Work in Kentucky Health Benefit Exchange
For anyone getting all butthurt over the headline, that's a little known mechanism of humor called "sarcasm".
Sarcasm
noun
1. harsh or bitter derision or irony.
2. a sharply ironical taunt; sneering or cutting remark:
I don't actually wish Bevin was dead. I do wish he operated with more tact and that he actually understood the law before he went around destroying boards and appointing people he isn't legally allowed to try and appoint.
For anyone interested in snake handling churches, I recommend Salvation on Sand Mountain: Snake-Handling and Redemption in Southern Appalachia
Amazon link: https://www.amazon.com/Salvation-Sand-Mountain-Snake-Handling-Redemption/dp/0140254587
For Louisville - there is lots of shopping (two major malls right across from each other, Mall St. Matthews and the Oxmoor Mall.)
Also, there are TONS of cool museums downtown. The Louisville Science Center is really cool if you're an overgrown kid like me! 21c is a hotel that has a free art gallery (totally worth checking out) and the Mega Cavern is really cool if you like caves/climbing stuff. Other ideas: http://www.tripadvisor.com/Attractions-g39604-Activities-Louisville_Kentucky.html
There are load of great books on the subject. Night Comes to Cumberlands is one of the famous books about Kentucky, although it's a bit troublesome at times as the author perpetuates some stereotypes.
The Road to Poverty is an amazing book that traces the economic forces that shaped Kentucky. It's based upon 100 years of academic research, but it's a narrative telling of that.
not sure how you're going through kynect, because it's no longer an option; even the benefind page no longer works. you have to go through https://www.healthcare.gov/ for your 2017 coverage. i've had full coverage no deductible medicaid since 1/2014.
"I was told, that's just not really an option here in KY"
curious as to where you got this information.
We ran around Southeast KY this weekend and did a few hikes at Pine Mountain in Pineville. The color is really starting to pop, and you can drive to a few good overlooks if that's more your thing. https://www.alltrails.com/us/kentucky/pineville. .
Kentucky has a long long history of growing cannabis. Kentucky is well suited to grow massive amounts of the plant. At one point, three counties in Kentucky produced the majority of all the hemp grown in the United States. Then they outlawed the "devil weed" and our farmers stopped growing it legally. Then, a few generations later, a bunch of Central Kentucky farmers were moving tons and tons of weed all around the United States.
I suggest The Cornbread Mafia: A Homegrown Syndicate's Code Of Silence And The Biggest Marijuana Bust In American History.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.cube.arc.tfa
I didn't realize it was a Red Cross thing.
I especially like that you can monitor more than one location so if your loved one is not with you... you can let rhem know or at least know what's happening .
There's lots of abandoned railroad tunnels in eastern Kentucky if you want creepy. Also the Mullins Station limestone mines near Livingston that could be part of a dystopian movie.
The Bluegrass Conspiracy might give you some ideas
https://www.amazon.com/Bluegrass-Conspiracy-Inside-Story-Murder/dp/152382462X
Hiked once in WV around Morgantown, and thought I was spoiled compared to trails in KY, though this was pretty neat: https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/west-virginia/clay-furnace-trail?u=m [It was easy, not "moderate".]
I'm sure there are much better trails in WV, but that state park seemed (in comparison to, say, Red River Gorge) to have more gravel 'trails' or just flat trails, were generally less interesting, graded/rocky, or thick. Plus, more red deer ticks and lyme disease.
If passing through Western/Central TN, the Natchez trace is nice. Also the Jellico mountain area where Daniel Boone national forest crosses TN and KY border, and the Smoky Mountains. Alltrails can direct to different trails.
Depreciation on the vehicle
Cost to insure the vehicle
Cost to register the vehicle
Routine maintenance on the vehicle.
Those are all real costs. This article explains a bit more.
I'm not sure which road to which you are referring. I believe the cover picture is of Wayne Ennis Rd, which runs along the Rolling Fork River, close to Howardstown. Here is the map of the ride. https://ridewithgps.com/routes/31998390
The front man from The Rooster's Crow makes a solo debut appearance for North Lime Coffee & Donuts Singer/Songwriter Night.
Hear music from Derek & The Rooster's Crow at:
Copy & paste from Ralph the Bus Driver • 2 hours ago
>For those who think this is a violation of the First Amendment, you are very wrong. The same principle that bans a religion from practicing human sacrifice or sex with a minor also may ban groups of people gathering.
>
>No religion has the right to avoid a "general applicable law". That is provided the law applies equally and can be demonstrated to further good government and social order
>
>see Reynolds v United States, 1873. Mormons may not practice polygamy even if it is a major part of their religious practice.
>
>see Employment Division v Smith, 1990. Using drugs as part of a religious practice does not excuse being fired after failing a drug test as a requirement for unemployment insurance
>
>see Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. Hialeah, 1993. A city ordinance banning animal sacrifice was overturned because it was aimed directly at a specific church. Other animal slaughtering and butchering within the city was not banned.
If you've never read the book "Cornbread Mafia", I highly recommend it. Fascinating look into the (at the time) largest marijuana growing operation in the nation - Marion Co. (including Raywick) is in there for sure.
See my comment up thread, but yeah... Shit is even crazier than it sounds.
​
https://www.amazon.com/Bluegrass-Conspiracy-Inside-Story-Murder/dp/152382462X
Kentucky Cryptids: "Monsters" of the Bluegrass State
Bearilla: the Kentucky Werewolf Monster
Matt Jones could have beat dirty moscow mitch as well, actually anyone but McGrath. If anyone hasn't read Mitch Please you should. https://www.amazon.com/Mitch-Please-McConnell-Kentucky-America/dp/1982142049