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Faith Communities in and around North Bay Village

North Bay Village and its surrounding areas offer a variety of places of worship, catering to diverse faith traditions. Here are some notable churches and temples in the vicinity:

Within North Bay Village:

  1. Ummah of Miami Beach
    • Address: 7904 West Dr, North Bay Village, FL 33141
    • Phone: 786-216-7035
    • Description: A local place of worship serving the Muslim community in North Bay Village.

Nearby Places of Worship:

  1. Calvary Chapel
    • Address: 7141 Indian Creek Dr, Miami Beach, FL 33141
    • Phone: 305-531-2730
    • Description: A Christ-centered, cross-focused church offering services and community programs.
  2. Temple Moses Sephardic Congregation of Florida
    • Address: 1200 Normandy Dr, Miami Beach, FL 33141
    • Phone: 305-861-6308
    • Description: A Sephardic Jewish congregation providing religious services and cultural events.
  3. Iglesia Jesus Es Rey
    • Address: 1133 71st St, Miami Beach, FL 33141
    • Phone: 305-867-7679
    • Description: A Christian church offering worship services and community outreach programs.
  4. St. Mary Magdalen Catholic Church
    • Address: 17775 N Bay Rd, Sunny Isles Beach, FL 33160
    • Phone: 305-931-0600
    • Description: A Catholic parish providing mass services and religious education.
  5. St. Bernard de Clairvaux Episcopal Church
    • Address: 16711 W Dixie Hwy, North Miami Beach, FL 33160
    • Phone: 305-945-1461
    • Description: An Episcopal church known for its historic architecture and spiritual services.
  6. St. Sophia Greek Orthodox Cathedral
    • Address: 2401 SW 3rd Ave, Miami, FL 33129
    • Phone: 305-854-2922
    • Description: A Greek Orthodox cathedral offering liturgical services and cultural events.
  7. New Revelation Alliance Church
    • Address: 11900 Biscayne Blvd, Miami, FL 33181
    • Phone: 305-893-8050
    • Description: A Christian church focusing on community service and spiritual growth.

These establishments reflect the rich tapestry of faith communities accessible to residents and visitors of North Bay Village, fostering spiritual growth and community engagement.

Manipulating the Markets

In a lengthy expose, Rolling Stone.com columnist Matt Taibbi explores Goldman Sachs’ role and participation in every major economic cyclical expansion and bust throughout the last century.
His thesis is quite simple, that Goldman has managed to position itself to gain from every major speculative bubble this century by manipulating the regulatory structures and regimes, all with the tacit approval of our government and politicians. Goldman has managed to secure this approval by positioning its minions deep inside government and in highly influential private and public positions. The number of senior Goldman executives who occupied high level government positions or have become executives at other financial services firms is staggering: Robert Rubin, Bill Clinton’s former Treasury secretary and former Citibank chairman; John Thain, chief of Merrill Lynch; George Bush’s last Treasury secretary, Henry Paulson, who was Goldman’s CEO; Joshua Bolten, Bush’s chief of staff, and Mark Patterson, the current Treasury chief of staff. This is just the short list, and does not include dozens of other, less senior executives.
Taibbi explores the major economic bubbles that created, and destroyed vast wealth this century: the Great Depression, the internet tech bubble, the housing bubble and the oil and commodities bubble. Goldman’s exploitation of these bubbles was aided and abetted by a complicit government, and Taibbi repeatedly demonstrates that it was the failure of government (after intense lobbying by Goldman and its cohorts) to properly regulate the financial markets that led to these speculative excesses. Government’s unwillingness to regulate or police the financial markets and the resultant weak or ineffectual limits that were implemented are a form of structured fraud. The dismantling of many regulatory regimes that previously limited or otherwise prevented these excesses created these opportunities, and Taibbi painstakingly details the history of Goldman’s manipulation of the lax or ineffectual regulatory structure. Structured fraud has altered the financial playing field in this country to such a degree that the masses (that’s you and I) have little hope of leveling the playing field without great assistance or significantly enhanced legal structures that currently don’t exist. Structured fraud has been systemically woven into the current financial regime, and it’s all quite legal. This article is a “must-read” for anyone who wants a penetrating understanding of how our financial system has been manipulated for decades.

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The Next Shoe to Drop?

Jonathan Weil at Bloomberg has written a shorter but equally compelling piece that discusses the often arcane and incomprehensible world of bank asset valuation.
In a well written and simple to read commentary, Mr. Weil notes that pending FASB accounting changes, which would require quarterly disclosure of bank assets’ fair values (as opposed to historical values) could dramatically revise downward the value of bank loans on their balance sheets. In many cases, these downward valuations could effectively eliminate shareholder equity, and lead to technical insolvency for many of these banks. As Weil highlights, current FASB rules permit most banks to carry these loans on their balance sheets at historical cost under a complex regime that allows management great latitude in recognizing loan losses. Under the proposals, these loan losses would be immediately recognized and lead to lower earnings. Weil notes that the disparity between historical book values and fair market values is so great that many banks, including many of our largest institutions, might become technically insolvent, and shareholder equity destroyed. This article dramatically underscores how easily manipulated our financial statements have become, and how even in-depth analysis of these statements by supposedly “sophisticated investors” is largely meaningless as a guidepost for prospective investment decisions. Without accurate and meaningful financial reporting, the numbers might as well be written in Cyrillic for all their purported value. This change is long overdue.

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Were We Lied To?

The well-respected Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), led by economist Dean Baker, has conducted an in-depth study of small business growth in the industrialized “first world”.
The study soundly debunks the myth that the United States has historically been a magnet for small-business creation due to its unfettered and unrestricted small business development policies and laws. Incredibly, the United States is actually near the bottom in every measure of small business creation. The United States has the second lowest share of self-employed workers, at 7.2%, leading only lowly Luxembourg in this category. The French economy, often the target of ridicule for its purportedly anti-free-market tendencies, is above the United States, at 9.0%. The United States also ranks poorly in other measures: it has among the lowest shares of employment in small businesses in manufacturing. These findings are dramatic, and underscore the continued destruction of manufacturing in the United States and the industry consolidation occurring as a result of big-box retailing and non-retailing enterprises. Competitively, US small businesses are traditionally unable to compete against big-box national retailers for market share, a less significant problem in other industrialized economies.
Interestingly, the CEPR believes that the United States’ comparative anti-competitiveness is largely due to the high-cost of the US healthcare system, which makes health care largely unaffordable to small businesses. The rest of the world’s “rich” economies have some form of universal access to health care, and small business owners are freed from the burden of this significant worry. The long-term cost of this deterrence to small business formation will be costly, as small business creation will remain weak and ineffectual, notwithstanding the “spin” and hyperbole associated with this facet of our economy. If the United States is unable to resolve its health-care dilemma, it will pay a very heavy price, as most of its workers will become dependent on the relative generosity of big-box America.

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Miami Personal Injury Lawyer: What kind of car insurance do you need in Florida?

Thank you for contacting my Florida car accident injury law firm about your potential claim. I have been representing people who were injured and sadly killed in car crashes across the State of Florida for over twenty years. Your question is the most commonly asked and often the most difficult to answer.
The first issue is determining who is at fault for the crash. Sometimes it is very clear, like in the case of a rear-end truck accident. Other times, it is very complicated and requires an investigation utilizing expert accident re-constructionists and bio-mechanical engineers, and gathering statements from witnesses and police officers. Even then, it may require a judge or jury to determine who is at fault.

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Audit Failures and Ratings Agencies

Why is anyone still surprised at the magnitude of the disaster that has befallen our economy? An economic collapse that resulted from the faulty analysis performed by those organizations charged with bestowing ratings on the thousands of securitized and structured finance products.
That anyone is surprised is simply amazing, given the collective failures of auditing firms in the last 20 years, and the collapse of Arthur Andersen due to the Enron audit failure. While audits of financial statements and audits of securitized products are dissimilar in many tangible respects, the rationale behind their failures is remarkably similar.
Complex financial statements and complex securitizations share one common feature: no one really understands them. Financial statements continue to be obtuse rationalizations of highly complex organizations and disparate companies, cobbled together and “consolidated” to appear as if the reporting entity was one, giant, unified company, rather than a series of companies that may or may not have little in common. This “consolidated” financial report purports to “fairly represent” the financial results of the consolidated entities, while providing little in the way of unconsolidated and segregated information on the disparate companies that comprise the whole.
The audits are prepared by rotating bands of auditors who generally leave the “Big 4” after little more than 2-3 years in practice, having grown weary of the numbing nature of audits. These “experts” are charged with engaging senior management in lively discussions regarding the adequacy and materiality of their financial representations, while being tethered by the massive audit fees these engagements generate. Think there’s a slight conflict of interest here? Of course there is. Senior managers have a schizophrenic need to “preserve” the client relationship while ensuring the fairness of the financial statements, a tightrope that often fails.
Is the audit relationship any different from that of the ratings agencies and the securitized products? Not really, as they both walk that same conflicted path, generating millions of dollars in fees for their organizations. That no one has credibly challenged the assertion that these ratings agencies bestowed “A” ratings on products that they did not understand is not amazing, what is amazing is that these same agencies continue to bestow identical ratings on similarly structured products, even after this debacle.
That these agencies had little understanding of the complex nature of the structured finance products is understandable, given the lack of prior experience with these products. Regulators, though, failed to learn and absorb the lessons of Enron, and allowed essentially the same regulatory structure to permeate the world of structured finance. The lessons “learned” as a result of the dozens of magnificent audit failures were never understood, either in or out of the accounting profession.
These lessons involve the futility of self-regulation and the inherent conflicts that exist between client generation, responsibility to the investing public, and the sheer volume of work available and fees generated by these engagements. These conflicts may ultimately prevent any meaningful regulation of these industries. The caveat is the same for both investor groups, whether as a bank relying on a set of financial statements to bestow a loan, or an institutional investor deciding whether to purchase complex structured products: it behooves them to perform independent, critical analysis beyond that bestowed by these organizations. The value of either “stamp” has fallen precipitously over the last 20 years, and in fact may mean very little today.

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