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<strong><center><a href="http://www.saulmexjg.com/2093/137/312/1163/2592.10tt62883642AAF1.php"><H3>It's Free Communication Weekend on eHarmony. Sign up Now</a></H3></strong>
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<center>This email was intended for abel-tasman@coredump.buug.de
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">Fox News Poll: 40 1093escribe nations debt as 'crisis'Voters say it is
more important to continue funding Social Security and Medicare at their
current levels than to reduce the federal deficit. Yet more than half
also think tax increases should not be considered during the current round
of budget negotiations, according to a new Fox News poll.Given those views,
it's unsurprising that more voters disapprove (53 percent) than approve
(39 percent) of President Obama's proposed budget, which includes both reductions
to entitlement program benefits and tax hikes on upper-income Americans.The
split is not entirely along party lines. Nearly a third of Democrats
give the president's budget plan a thumbs down (62 percent approve, 31
percent disapprove).The sentiment is even stronger on the tax issue.Since
taxes rose in January, a 55-percent majority of voters says tax increases
should be off the table for the next budget deal. Most Republicans
feel that way (68 percent), but so do many Democrats (42 percent).At
the same time there is a clear consensus that debt is a
concern. Four in 10 voters describe the nation's debt situation as a
crisis, and more than 8 in 10 see debt as a major
problem (43 percent), if not a crisis (40 percent).CLICK TO VIEW THE
FOX NEWS POLL.Even so, by 54-40 percent, voters prefer keeping Social Security
and Medicare programs funded at their current levels over reducing the deficit.On
the other hand, there's some uncertai would probably be eligible.The issue has generated
an intense advocacy campaign, with gay rights organizations and Hispanic
groups such as the National Council of La Raza squaring off with
religious interests such as the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which
sent a letter to Obama telling him including the provision could jeopardize
the whole bill.At the Human Rights Campaign, four of its seven federal
lobbyists are engaged in pushing lawmakers to back such an amendment. Immigration
Equality, another group supporting the provision, said it was bringing more
than 60 families from 24 states to the Capitol on Wednesday to
ask lawmakers to offer their support.And Log Cabin Republicans, a gay conservative
group, is making a pro-business pitch with potential GOP supporters, arguing
that including gay couples would allow U.S. companies to retain the best
talent instead of forcing good workers to leave the U.S. to be
with their partners.Such may be the case for Paul Coyle, a 45-year-old
partner in a Chicago law firm, who has spent the past 10
years in a long-distance relationship with his partner in Toronto. At first,
the two men would take turns flying back and forth, he said,
until immigration officials cracked down, making it harder for his partner
to enter the U.S. Now Coyle flies to Canada every other week,
wondering each time whether it would be cheaper and more rewarding to
pack up his law practice and move to Canada."It's emotiona
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