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The One About The Las Vegas Per Diem [Ces One-liners]

“Just bought $50 of burritos to take home because I haven’t finished my per diem.” More » Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/SS7rMbVUqXM/the-one-about-the-las-vegas-per-diem netanyahu fedora kid cudi famous quotes sherwin williams foobar iaa

[OOC] Spellwar: Creation and Destruction

Forum rules This forum is for OOC discussion about existing roleplays. Please post all “Players Wanted” threads in the Roleplayers Wanted forum! Topic Tags: Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for [...]

FDA revisits safety of newer birth control drugs (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Birth control drugs that were heavily promoted as having fewer side effects and the ability to clear up acne and other hormonal bothers are under new scrutiny from safety regulators. Research suggesting that newer birth control formulations are more likely to cause blood clots than older drugs has prompted the Food and Drug [...]

Commercial or communal: Why is outsourcing taboo for churches and pharmaceutical companies?

Public release date: 13-Dec-2011[ | E-mail | Share ] Contact: Mary-Ann TwistJCR@bus.wisc.edu608-255-5582University of Chicago Press Journals Consumers hold churches and pharmaceutical companies to different moral standards than other organizations, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. “Imagine the CEO of a pharmaceutical company who declares that he is in the [...]

More With Maryn: McKenna on Antibiotic Resistance

Science Talk | Health In part 2 of our conversation with journalist and author Maryn McKenna, she talks about antibiotic resistance in agriculture and human health, MRSA and offers a brief coda on the subject of fecal transplants. February 2, 2012?| More Science Talk Subscribe via [...]

Obama courts Latino vote on economic tour (AP) January 28, 2012

BUCKLEY AIR FORCE BASE, Colo. ? President Barack Obama is courting Hispanics in politically important states, setting himself up as a champion of the crucial Latino voting bloc and as a foil to Republican candidates fighting for a share of support from the same groups.

With Latino voters voting overwhelmingly Democratic, Obama is not in danger of losing the support of a majority of Hispanics. But he does need their intensity, and a Gallup tracking poll shows that while a majority of Hispanics approve of Obama, that approval is not as high as it is among black voters.

Pitching his economic agenda during a three-day, five-state trip this week, Obama has not ignored the fact that three of the states ? Nevada, Arizona and Colorado ? all have Hispanic populations of 20 percent or more. A majority of them are Democratic, but they also could be a factor in upcoming nominating contests in those states. Nevada and Colorado hold caucuses within two weeks and Arizona has a primary Feb. 28.

In Arizona Wednesday, where he was drawing attention to his efforts to increase manufacturing, Obama playfully interacted with a supporter who shouted out: “Barack es mi hermano! (Barack is my brother!)”

“Mi hermano ? mucho gusto (My brother, a real pleasure),” Obama shouted back.

And it was no accident that he scheduled an interview with Univision, the Spanish language network that reaches a broad swath of the U.S. Latino population, while he was in Arizona and with local Telemundo affiliates Thursday in Las Vegas and in Denver. All that while former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and the rest of the Republican presidential field were battling in Florida, another state with a key Latino voting bloc.

“It’s an important community in this country and he will continue to have those interactions,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said of Obama’s efforts to reach out to Spanish language media.

No issue reverberates more in the appeal to Latinos than immigration.

For Obama, it reared up suddenly for him Wednesday when Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, a Republican who signed one of the toughest laws to curtail illegal immigration, greeted him at the airport tarmac in Mesa, Ariz., with a handwritten invitation for the president to join her in a visit to the Mexican border.

Obama replied coolly, noting that he did not appreciate the way she had depicted him in a book she published last year, “Scorpions for Breakfast.” In the book, Brewer writes that Obama was condescending and lectured her during a meeting at the White House to discuss immigration. “He was a little disturbed about my book,” Brewer told two reporters shortly after the encounter.

Obama continued to promote his economic plan Thursday in Nevada and Colorado, focusing on energy policy and his attempts to expand oil and gas exploration while also emphasizing clean energy.

“Doubling down on a clean energy industry will create lots of jobs in the process,” the president said at Buckley Air Force Base in Colorado, where the Air Force has installed solar panels and tested jets that run on biofuels.

As such, he was indirectly pitching to Hispanics as well. A new Pew Research Center poll found that 54 percent of Latinos believe that the economic downturn has been harder on them than on other groups in the U.S.

“There is no question that Latinos were hard hit, especially by the bursting of the housing bubble and the resulting steep decline in construction work,” Carney said Thursday. “Latinos are overrepresented in the construction industry. It’s one of the reasons why, certainly, Latinos would greatly benefit from infrastructure investments that put construction workers back to work.”

In 2008, Obama beat Republican John McCain by a 2-1 margin among Hispanics.

To win again, he will need that level of enthusiasm to make up for weaknesses elsewhere in his voter support. In a bright spot for Obama, the Pew poll found that even though Hispanics believe their economic condition is poor, two-thirds of those polled said they expect their financial situation to improve over the next year, whereas 58 percent of the overall population expect the same.

In his interview with Univision, Obama made a point of noting that both Romney and Gingrich have said they would veto legislation, known as the DREAM Act, that would give a pathway to citizenship to children who came to the United States illegally but who attend college or enlist in the military.

“They believe that we should not provide a pathway to citizenship for young people who were brought here when they were very young children and are basically American kids but right now are still in a shadow,” Obama said. “They’ve said that they would veto the DREAM Act. Both of them.”

At a debate Monday on NBC, however, both Gingrich and Romney said they would support modified legislation that only applied to young people who joined the military. “I would not support the part that simply says everybody who goes to college is automatically waived for having broken the law,” Gingrich said.

Obama, in the interview, explicitly connected the Republican presidential field to congressional Republicans, who suffer from bottom-dwelling approval ratings right now. Asked why he had been unable to deliver on his promise for overhauling the immigration system, Obama replied:

“Well, it’s very simple. We couldn’t get any Republican votes. Zero. None,” he said. “So this is the kind of barrier that we’re meeting in Congress. We’re just going to keep on pushing and pushing until hopefully we finally get a break.”

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mexico/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120126/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama

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