[Abel-tasman] NASA Doctor Reveals How To Reverse Brain Age
Cognizine
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Sun Nov 10 13:10:10 CET 2013
NASA Doctor Reveals How To Reverse Brain Age
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liarly gridlocked over the budget. January's tax deal has stiffened
GOP resolve against further tax increases. Obama's recently unveiled plan
for lower inflation increases for Social Security recipients -- an idea
embraced by Bowles and Simpson -- has landed with a thud among
most Democrats.Obama and the top GOP negotiator, House Speaker John Boehner
of Ohio, stopped talking after failed talks in 2011 and late last
year. It's commonly assumed that the need this summer for must-pass legislation
to increase the government's borrowing cap will draw the weary combatants
back into negotiations.The revised Simpson-Bowles plan proposes about $600
billion in increased taxes over the coming 10 years on top of
the $600 billion-plus signed by Obama in January, another $600 billion or
so in cuts to Medicare, and deeper cuts to domestic agencies and
the Pentagon than proposed by the president.Simpson and Bowles believe it's
crucial to get the government's debt below 70 percent of the size
of the economy, something that Obama's budget fails to do.Obama and Boehner
have twice seemed close to a budget bargain, but Boehner walked away
from the talks both times after detecting resistance from top Republicans."The
last two years have been marked by fiscal brinksmanship," Simpson and Bowles
said in a statement. "Instead of enacting a comprehensive deficit reduction
plan ... policymakers have jumped from crisis to crisis, waiting until the
last moment to do
April 18, 2013: Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., flanked by Sen. Charles Schumer,
D-N.Y., left, and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., right, speaks about immigration
legislation.APAuthors of the newly released Senate immigration bill touted
the package Thursday as a "bipartisan breakthrough" in advance of a critical
hearing, as opponents began to organize against the bill -- claiming it
doesn't do enough to enforce existing immigration law.Sen. Marco Rubio,
R-Fla., who has put his conservative reputation on the line with his
involvement in writing the bill, took to the floor late Thursday afternoon
to defend it. Though critics have homed in on the bill's pathway
to citizenship for illegal immigrants, Rubio said the package would also
fix a "broken" legal immigration system so that foreign students trained
in America would not be sent back home once they've learned their
skills."If there wasn't a single illegal immigrant in the United States,
we would still have to do immigration reform," Rubio said.As for the
path to citizenship, which would give up to 11 million illegal immigrants
a shot at legal status, Rubio said "the alternative is to do
nothing" -- which he described as "amnesty."Rubio and the seven other co-authors,
who formally unveiled the legislation at a press conference Thursday, are
hoping to avoid the fate of the 2007 immigration bill, which died
amid heated criticism from both sides of the aisle. Republicans have bluntly
professed an in
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