[Abel-tasman] How can you be confident when you're so small?

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ocrats, it's a precarious position to be in. 
Democratic senators overwhelmingly support gay marriage -- all but three 
are now on the record voicing their support -- and two dozen 
of them this year backed a separate bill called the Uniting American 
Families Act to let gays sponsor their partners independent of a comprehensive 
immigration overhaul.But the party's senators are still bruised from an 
agonizing defeat on gun control this month. And few seem eager to 
inject divisive issues that might sink their best prospects for a major 
legislative victory this year and a potential keystone of President Barack 
Obama's legacy."Any amendment which might sink the immigration bill, I would 
worry about," Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., said in a brief interview, adding 
that he had yet to decide whether an amendment for gays and 
lesbians would meet that yardstick.Support from both Hispanics and gays 
was critical to Obama's re-election, and his overwhelming advantage among 
Hispanics was a major factor prompting Republicans to warm to immigration 
overhaul almost immediately after. But now, one community's gain on the 
immigration front could be to the other's detriment."As you continue to 
add other issues to the immigration discussion, it's going to make it 
more challenging," said Sen. John Hoeven, a North Dakota Republican.Patrick 
Leahy, D-Vt., who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, has committed to 
offering an amendment to the bill to allow gay citize
on Dzhokhar under the "public safety 
exception" invoked by the Justice Department.Two officials with knowledge 
of the FBI briefing on Capitol Hill said the FBI was against 
stopping the investigators' questioning and was stunned that the judge, 
Justice Department prosecutors and public defenders showed up, feeling valuable 
intelligence may have been sacrificed as a result.The FBI had been questioning 
Tsarnaev for 16 hours before the judge called a start to the 
court proceeding, officials familiar with the Capitol Hill briefing told 
Fox News. Moreover, the FBI informed lawmakers that the suspect had been 
providing valuable intelligence, but stopped talking once the magistrate 
judge read him his rights.The exact timeline is unclear. A transcript of 
the court proceeding shows Bowler asking a doctor if Tsarnaev was "alert.""You 
can rouse him," she says in the transcript."How are you feeling? Are 
you able to answer some questions?" the doctor asks Tsarnaev, who nods.Although 
Bowler advised Tsarnaev, an ethnic Chechen and U.S. citizen, of his Miranda 
rights, it remains to be seen whether anything he told investigators before 
Bowler arrived can be admitted as evidence against him -- or whether 
such interrogations would even be needed to convict him, given the amount 
of other evidence referenced in the criminal complaint signed by FBI Special 
Agent Daniel Genck.Some Republican lawmakers have criticized the Obama administration 
for deciding again


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