I have too many ideas and they’re all boring by themselves. So why not combine them. Too bad I have no idea how to do this. Help me?

- Meghan Smith met two twin boys when she was eleven years old due to a strange circumstance. She always had difficulties telling them apart, seeing as they were obviously different personality wise. Daniel was the "good" twin, he was sincere, sweet, kind, and adorable. And his brother, Dean, well, his parents were working on him.. But, as the trio grows up, they start to change, and change isn’t always good.

- Sam has always had her eyes on Jack Hulsing, who transferred to her school when she was a freshman. He was never popular, but people liked him. He was mysterious, funny, and cute. But, she never got the chance to talk to him. That is, when she comes down with something and sees him sitting in her office. Apparently he comes to the nurse’s office everyday, but she doesn’t know why. Does Jack Hulsing have more to himself than just a cool exterior?

- Alyssa is neither at the bottom or top of the high school food chain, but she talks to a somewhat cute, popular guy from time to time in her psychology class. When she finds out that he has had a crush on her best friend, Emily, since eighth grade, she wants to help him out. But, what could happen if she starts selfishly thinking she wants him to say all these things to her.. not Emily.

- Because of an unknown disease, Callum has been home schooled his entire life. He forgets simple things too often and his memory isn’t stable enough to attend regular public school. As expected, his memory seems to deteriorate even more as time passes, causing his parents to research a doctor across the country. His parents were never the wealthiest on the block and become desperate enough to resorting to borrowing money from Callum’s grandparents in order to have him see this doctor. But, with low wages, how do they expect to pay for the costs that come from seeing this doctor? Things are going his way, though. The doctor has a preposition for them― his daughter, Emma, has never had many friends, so it’s expected that her father would be concerned for her. Without any second thoughts, they agree to this, not even knowing what she’s like. But, Callum finds out on his own what she’s like. At first, it’s just for his parents.. but then he starts to get closer to Emma and has different intentions than just being her friend. Soon, he becomes restless and can’t help but feel butterflies when she’s around. His memory starts to increase, but not because of the medicine, because of Emma.

- Matt has finally graduated from high school, and his parents couldn’t be anymore proud. He had straight A’s all four years, and his parents are under the impression that he’s actually going to school to take over their rich business. But, Matt wants to be an artist. His parents aren’t going to let him go so easy once they figure out he ran away from home. They cancel all his credit cards, and have people searching all over for him. All hope is lost for Matt.. until he meets a bored rich girl, pretending to be a lesbian to tick off her parents. Her parents don’t believe her, and she is in a bit of a dilemma. They make a compromise.. Matt dresses up as her "girlfriend" in order to make her parents believe her, and she pays him, giving him enough money to both go to a good college and rent an apartment. But, with his parents looking all over for him, college isn’t a good idea at the moment. He lies low, and she allows him to stay at her place as long as he doesn’t get caught. (insert clever ending sentence here)

- Kameron is on the run from the law for something he didn’t do. He goes from garage to garage, trashcan to trashcan, shed to shed, just for a place to sleep every night. Until one night, he’s discovered by a girl named Annie. She demands he get out before she calls the cops but he begs her to listen to him. She listens as he tells her he has no idea why the law is after him and she lets him stay, not in the garage, but in her bedroom. How can he stay in a girl’s room without wanting to touch her? Just maybe things will work in his favor..

I have more, going to add them into the additional details. Wow, this is long. I won’t get many answers probably, ha.
- Phoebe has never had a dream that she remembers―only nightmares. Every night, the same nightmare replays in her head about the death of her little brother, Damon, who died before his eyes even opened. She’s haunted by this nightmare and wonders if she can ever have a real dream. Her parents decide it’s best for her to move to a new place to forget about Damon. In her new home, she drifts into a place where she dreams about a boy with a piercing on his left ear dressed up as a doctor, saving Damon’s life. His face was covered but she knows he exists somewhere in the world. She knows this is true the second a boy in her class, James Anderson, says hello. He always seems to be right by her when things are bad and he immediately gains her trust. Could he be the boy in her dream? That’s what she thought before she’s partnered up with the school rebel, Griffin Parker. Now she’s not so sure..
- In her school, everyone thinks they know the "true" Ashlin Campbell, but the only person who does is her online friend, DistinctxP. She thinks she’s in love with DistinctxP, that is, until he soon disappears out of nowhere. She has no one to talk to anymore, until she starts talking to the new kid. At first, he annoys her, but she soon softens up around him. What will happen if DistinctxP starts talking to her again as she starts to fall in love with the new guy?

- One night, David is just walking around his small neighborhood when he spots a girl sleeping in a tree fort. He tries to wake her, but ends up falling asleep at the base of the tree. When he wakes up the next morning, she’s fallen on his lap. Love at first sight? More like love at first flight.

- Victoria, Summer, and Callan―or more commonly known as the “trio”― have grown up together since Victoria met Summer and Callen in fourth grade. Through laughs, cries, and anger management classes, they have survived long enough

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Thanks to immigration laws that favor relatives instead of skilled workers, most of the immigrants being admitted are low-skilled. Out of all the adult immigrants admitted in 2000, 69 percent had no reported profession, occupation, or job at all.2 The average adult immigrant has only a ninth-grade education; more than a third of immigrants over 25 are not high school graduates.3
Claims That We Need Low-Skilled Workers Are False.
Some employers claim that they need to import low-skilled workers to compete in the world market, where wages are very low. But those employers have simply become dependent on cheap foreign labor to the detriment of American workers: “Network recruitment [of immigrants] not only excludes American workers from certain jobs; it also builds a dependency relationship between U.S. employers and Mexican sources that requires a constant infusion of new workers,” says economist Philip Martin.4 Such a strategy for our economy is doomed to failure anyway: “The low-wage strategy may work in the short run, but in the long run it’s a loser. In the long run, we are not going to win a wage-cutting contest with the Third World,” notes economist Vernon Briggs.5

Besides, the United States already has plenty of low-skilled native workers: “No technologically advanced industrial nation that has 27 million illiterate adults … need have any fear about a shortage of unskilled workers in its foreseeable future.”6

The effects are most pronounced in the cities where immigrants go. High immigration cities have twice as much unemployment as low immigration cities.7 Because too much immigration keeps wages low, wage increases in low-immigration cities have been 48 percent higher than in high-immigration cities.8 Thus, immigration contributes to the growing disparity between the rich and the poor in this country9 and the shrinking of the middle class.10 But the damage is not confined to high-immigration locales. The harm is carried to other cities when poor Americans whose wages have been depressed or who have been displaced from their jobs by immigration move to low-immigration areas in search of greener pastures.11

Wages Are Lowered By Competition From Immigrants.
The effect of immigration on those low-skilled Americans is profound, and the government knows it: “Undoubtedly access to lower-wage foreign workers has a depressing effect [on wages],” says former Labor Secretary Robert Reich.12 Research suggests that between 40 and 50 percent of wage-loss among low-skilled Americans is due to the immigration of low-skilled workers.13 Some native workers lose not just wages but their jobs through immigrant competition. An estimated 1,880,000 American workers are displaced from their jobs every year by immigration; the cost for providing welfare and assistance to these Americans is over billion a year.14

Large-Scale Immigration of Low-Skilled Workers Must Be Stopped.
In short, the mass importation of low-skilled workers through immigration damages the job market for Americans, depresses wages for low-skilled natives, and costs the taxpayer billions a year-all for the benefit of businesses that have become dependent on cheap, foreign labor. An immigration system that admits too many people, without regard to their skill levels or impact on the labor force, is to blame. We must reform the immigration laws to lower the level of annual immigration and to ensure that those immigrants who are admitted complement, not compete, with our native labor force.

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Thanks to immigration laws that favor relatives instead of skilled workers, most of the immigrants being admitted are low-skilled. Out of all the adult immigrants admitted in 2000, 69 percent had no reported profession, occupation, or job at all.2 The average adult immigrant has only a ninth-grade education; more than a third of immigrants over 25 are not high school graduates.3
Claims That We Need Low-Skilled Workers Are False.
Some employers claim that they need to import low-skilled workers to compete in the world market, where wages are very low. But those employers have simply become dependent on cheap foreign labor to the detriment of American workers: “Network recruitment [of immigrants] not only excludes American workers from certain jobs; it also builds a dependency relationship between U.S. employers and Mexican sources that requires a constant infusion of new workers,” says economist Philip Martin.4 Such a strategy for our economy is doomed to failure anyway: “The low-wage strategy may work in the short run, but in the long run it’s a loser. In the long run, we are not going to win a wage-cutting contest with the Third World,” notes economist Vernon Briggs.5

Besides, the United States already has plenty of low-skilled native workers: “No technologically advanced industrial nation that has 27 million illiterate adults … need have any fear about a shortage of unskilled workers in its foreseeable future.”6

The effects are most pronounced in the cities where immigrants go. High immigration cities have twice as much unemployment as low immigration cities.7 Because too much immigration keeps wages low, wage increases in low-immigration cities have been 48 percent higher than in high-immigration cities.8 Thus, immigration contributes to the growing disparity between the rich and the poor in this country9 and the shrinking of the middle class.10 But the damage is not confined to high-immigration locales. The harm is carried to other cities when poor Americans whose wages have been depressed or who have been displaced from their jobs by immigration move to low-immigration areas in search of greener pastures.11

Wages Are Lowered By Competition From Immigrants.
The effect of immigration on those low-skilled Americans is profound, and the government knows it: “Undoubtedly access to lower-wage foreign workers has a depressing effect [on wages],” says former Labor Secretary Robert Reich.12 Research suggests that between 40 and 50 percent of wage-loss among low-skilled Americans is due to the immigration of low-skilled workers.13 Some native workers lose not just wages but their jobs through immigrant competition. An estimated 1,880,000 American workers are displaced from their jobs every year by immigration; the cost for providing welfare and assistance to these Americans is over billion a year.14

Large-Scale Immigration of Low-Skilled Workers Must Be Stopped.
In short, the mass importation of low-skilled workers through immigration damages the job market for Americans, depresses wages for low-skilled natives, and costs the taxpayer billions a year-all for the benefit of businesses that have become dependent on cheap, foreign labor. An immigration system that admits too many people, without regard to their skill levels or impact on the labor force, is to blame. We must reform the immigration laws to lower the level of annual immigration and to ensure that those immigrants who are admitted complement, not compete, with our native labor force.

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I knew a girl that could find her ex online on a website and all she needed was his name and SS#. I am tring to get child support from my ex and I have been tring for almost two years. I just now have gotten ahold of his SS# and I want to be able to track him down when he get’s a job and garnish his wages for my money. That’s what the lady did that I used to know.
I have been through the court and they aren’t doing anything. I just now have his SS# and when I called them to ask them if it would help, she said the lady is in a meeting and will call back. That was a couple of hours ago. They suck and don’t help around here. I need different help please!

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