With second term, Obama now facing new urgent task
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WASHINGTON (AP) - President Barack Obama faces a new urgent task now that he has a second term, working with a status-quo Congress to address an impending financial crisis that economists say could send the country back into recession.
"You made your voice heard," Obama said in his acceptance speech, signaling that he believes the bulk of the country is behind his policies. It's a sticking point for House Republicans, sure to balk at that.
The same voters who gave Obama four more years in office also elected a divided Congress, sticking with the dynamic that has made it so hard for the president to advance his agenda. Democrats retained control of the Senate; Republicans kept their House majority.
House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, spoke of a dual mandate. "If there is a mandate, it is a mandate for both parties to find common ground and take steps together to help our economy grow and create jobs," he said.
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky had a more harsh assessment.
"The voters have not endorsed the failures or excesses of the president's first term," McConnell said. "They have simply given him more time to finish the job they asked him to do together" with a balanced Congress.
Obama's more narrow victory was nothing like the jubilant celebration in 2008, when his hope-and-change election as the nation's first black president captivated the world. This time, Obama ground it out with a stay-the-course pitch that essentially boiled down to a plea for more time to make things right and a hope that Congress will be more accommodating than in the past.
The most pressing challenges immediately ahead for the 44th president are all too familiar: an economy still baby-stepping its way toward full health; 23 million people out of work or in search of better jobs; civil war in Syria; a menacing standoff over Iran's nuclear program.
Sharp differences with Republicans in Congress on taxes, spending, deficit reduction, immigration and more await. While Republicans control the House, Democrats have at least 53 votes in the Senate and Republicans 45. One newly elected independent isn't saying which party he'll side with, and North Dakota's race not yet called.
Votes also were being counted Wednesday in the Montana and Washington gubernatorial races.
Obama's list of promises to keep includes many holdovers he was unable to deliver on in his first term, such as rolling back tax cuts for upper-income people, overhauling immigration policy and reducing federal deficits. Six in 10 voters said in exit polls that taxes should be increased, and nearly half of voters said taxes should be increased on incomes over $250,000, as Obama has called for.
"It's very clear from the exit polling that a majority of Americans recognize that we need to share responsibility for reducing the deficit," Maryland Rep. Chris Van Hollen, the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, told CNN. "That means asking higher-income earners to contribute more to reducing the deficit."
But Sara Taylor Fagen, who served as political director in President George W. Bush's second term, warned the current White House to pay heed to the closely divided electorate, a lesson her party learned after 2004. With more than 90 percent of precincts reporting, the popular vote went 50 percent for Obama to 48.4 percent for Romney,
"It'll be interesting if the Obama team misinterprets the size of their victory," Fagen said. "I think if you look back at history, we pushed Social Security and the Congress wasn't ready for that and wasn't going to do it. And had President Bush gone after immigration, we may be sitting in a very different position as a party."
Obama predicted in the waning days of the campaign that his victory would motivate Republicans to make a deal on immigration policy next year to make up for having "so alienated the fastest-growing demographic group in the country, the Latino community."
Former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour agreed that a lesson of 2012 is for his Republican Party to change the party's approach on immigration.
"Republicans say, 'We don't want to reward people for breaking the law,'" Barbour told CBS. "The way we need to look at it is, how are we going to grow the American economy and where does our immigration policy fit into that?"
Even before Obama gets to his second inaugural on Jan. 20, he must deal with the threatened "fiscal cliff." A combination of automatic tax increases and steep across-the-board spending cuts are set to take effect in January if Washington doesn't quickly reach a budget deal. Experts have warned that the economy could tip back into recession without an agreement.
Newly elected Democrats signaled they want compromise to avoid the fiscal cliff.
Sen.-elect Tim Kaine, a former Virginia governor who defeated Republican George Allen, said on NBC's "Today" show that voters sent a message they want "cooperative government." But he also says the election results show that the public doesn't want "all the levers in one party's hands" on Capitol Hill.
From Massachusetts, Elizabeth Warren said on "CBS This Morning" that those who voted for her opponent, Republican Sen. Scott Brown, expressed a desire for lawmakers to work together. She says: "I heard that loud and clear."
Obama repeated his campaign slogan of moving "forward" repeatedly in a victory speech early Wednesday in his hometown of Chicago.
"We will disagree, sometimes fiercely, about how to get there," he said. "As it has for more than two centuries, progress will come in fits and starts. It's not always a straight line. It's not always a smooth path. By itself, the recognition that we have common hopes and dreams won't end all the gridlock, or solve all our problems, or substitute for the painstaking work of building consensus, and making the difficult compromises needed to move this country forward. But that common bond is where we must begin."
Former Obama adviser Anita Dunn told "CBS This Morning" that the president made it clear in his acceptance speech that he will be reaching out, and she warned GOP House leaders, representing Ohio, Virginia and Wisconsin, to keep in mind that their voters also wanted to keep Obama.
"Clearly there's a lot of momentum and a lot of incentive for people to work together to really find answers to the challenges," she said.
The vanquished Republican, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, tried to set a more conciliatory tone on the way off the stage.
"At a time like this, we can't risk partisan bickering," Romney said after a campaign filled with it. "Our leaders have to reach across the aisle to do the people's work."
Obama won at least 303 electoral votes to 206 for Romney, with 270 needed for victory, and had a near-sweep of the nine most hotly contested states.
Obama's re-election means his signature health care overhaul will endure, as will the Wall Street overhaul enacted after the economic meltdown. The drawdown of troops in Afghanistan will continue apace. With an aging roster of justices, the president probably will have at least one more nomination to the Supreme Court.
A second term is sure to produce turnover in his Cabinet. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has made it clear he wants to leave at the end of Obama's first term but is expected to remain in the post until a successor is confirmed. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Obama's rival for the presidency four years ago, is ready to leave. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta isn't expected to stay on.
Some Americans were hopeful for progress in Obama's second term.
"He may not have done a great job in my mind but I kinda trust him," Jerry Shul said Wednesday morning in New York's Times Square. "And I feel like he's gonna keep trying and I feel like when people keep trying in you favor things work out. I have faith in him, I have faith he will get with the Republicans and get something done."
Elsewhere on the ballot, voters in Maine and Maryland became the first to approve same-sex marriage by popular vote while Washington state and Colorado legalized recreational use of marijuana.
Obama claimed at least seven of the nine swing states, most notably Ohio, seen as the big prize. He also prevailed in Iowa, New Hampshire, Colorado, Nevada, Virginia and Wisconsin. Romney got North Carolina.
Florida was too close to call Wednesday morning. The unofficial count had Obama with a 46,000-vote lead, but Florida historically has left as many as 5 percent of its votes uncounted until after Election Day.
Overall, Obama won 25 states and the District of Columbia. Romney won 24 states.
It was a more measured victory than four years ago, when Obama claimed 365 electoral votes to Arizona Sen. John McCain's 173, and won 53 percent of the popular vote.
Preliminary figures indicate fewer people participated this time. Associated Press figures showed that about 118 million people had voted in the White House race, but that number will rise as more votes are counted. In 2008, 131 million people voted, according to the Federal Election Commission.
"You made your voice heard," Obama said in his acceptance speech, signaling that he believes the bulk of the country is behind his policies. It's a sticking point for House Republicans, sure to balk at that.
The same voters who gave Obama four more years in office also elected a divided Congress, sticking with the dynamic that has made it so hard for the president to advance his agenda. Democrats retained control of the Senate; Republicans kept their House majority.
House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, spoke of a dual mandate. "If there is a mandate, it is a mandate for both parties to find common ground and take steps together to help our economy grow and create jobs," he said.
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky had a more harsh assessment.
"The voters have not endorsed the failures or excesses of the president's first term," McConnell said. "They have simply given him more time to finish the job they asked him to do together" with a balanced Congress.
Obama's more narrow victory was nothing like the jubilant celebration in 2008, when his hope-and-change election as the nation's first black president captivated the world. This time, Obama ground it out with a stay-the-course pitch that essentially boiled down to a plea for more time to make things right and a hope that Congress will be more accommodating than in the past.
The most pressing challenges immediately ahead for the 44th president are all too familiar: an economy still baby-stepping its way toward full health; 23 million people out of work or in search of better jobs; civil war in Syria; a menacing standoff over Iran's nuclear program.
Sharp differences with Republicans in Congress on taxes, spending, deficit reduction, immigration and more await. While Republicans control the House, Democrats have at least 53 votes in the Senate and Republicans 45. One newly elected independent isn't saying which party he'll side with, and North Dakota's race not yet called.
Votes also were being counted Wednesday in the Montana and Washington gubernatorial races.
Obama's list of promises to keep includes many holdovers he was unable to deliver on in his first term, such as rolling back tax cuts for upper-income people, overhauling immigration policy and reducing federal deficits. Six in 10 voters said in exit polls that taxes should be increased, and nearly half of voters said taxes should be increased on incomes over $250,000, as Obama has called for.
"It's very clear from the exit polling that a majority of Americans recognize that we need to share responsibility for reducing the deficit," Maryland Rep. Chris Van Hollen, the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, told CNN. "That means asking higher-income earners to contribute more to reducing the deficit."
But Sara Taylor Fagen, who served as political director in President George W. Bush's second term, warned the current White House to pay heed to the closely divided electorate, a lesson her party learned after 2004. With more than 90 percent of precincts reporting, the popular vote went 50 percent for Obama to 48.4 percent for Romney,
"It'll be interesting if the Obama team misinterprets the size of their victory," Fagen said. "I think if you look back at history, we pushed Social Security and the Congress wasn't ready for that and wasn't going to do it. And had President Bush gone after immigration, we may be sitting in a very different position as a party."
Obama predicted in the waning days of the campaign that his victory would motivate Republicans to make a deal on immigration policy next year to make up for having "so alienated the fastest-growing demographic group in the country, the Latino community."
Former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour agreed that a lesson of 2012 is for his Republican Party to change the party's approach on immigration.
"Republicans say, 'We don't want to reward people for breaking the law,'" Barbour told CBS. "The way we need to look at it is, how are we going to grow the American economy and where does our immigration policy fit into that?"
Even before Obama gets to his second inaugural on Jan. 20, he must deal with the threatened "fiscal cliff." A combination of automatic tax increases and steep across-the-board spending cuts are set to take effect in January if Washington doesn't quickly reach a budget deal. Experts have warned that the economy could tip back into recession without an agreement.
Newly elected Democrats signaled they want compromise to avoid the fiscal cliff.
Sen.-elect Tim Kaine, a former Virginia governor who defeated Republican George Allen, said on NBC's "Today" show that voters sent a message they want "cooperative government." But he also says the election results show that the public doesn't want "all the levers in one party's hands" on Capitol Hill.
From Massachusetts, Elizabeth Warren said on "CBS This Morning" that those who voted for her opponent, Republican Sen. Scott Brown, expressed a desire for lawmakers to work together. She says: "I heard that loud and clear."
Obama repeated his campaign slogan of moving "forward" repeatedly in a victory speech early Wednesday in his hometown of Chicago.
"We will disagree, sometimes fiercely, about how to get there," he said. "As it has for more than two centuries, progress will come in fits and starts. It's not always a straight line. It's not always a smooth path. By itself, the recognition that we have common hopes and dreams won't end all the gridlock, or solve all our problems, or substitute for the painstaking work of building consensus, and making the difficult compromises needed to move this country forward. But that common bond is where we must begin."
Former Obama adviser Anita Dunn told "CBS This Morning" that the president made it clear in his acceptance speech that he will be reaching out, and she warned GOP House leaders, representing Ohio, Virginia and Wisconsin, to keep in mind that their voters also wanted to keep Obama.
"Clearly there's a lot of momentum and a lot of incentive for people to work together to really find answers to the challenges," she said.
The vanquished Republican, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, tried to set a more conciliatory tone on the way off the stage.
"At a time like this, we can't risk partisan bickering," Romney said after a campaign filled with it. "Our leaders have to reach across the aisle to do the people's work."
Obama won at least 303 electoral votes to 206 for Romney, with 270 needed for victory, and had a near-sweep of the nine most hotly contested states.
Obama's re-election means his signature health care overhaul will endure, as will the Wall Street overhaul enacted after the economic meltdown. The drawdown of troops in Afghanistan will continue apace. With an aging roster of justices, the president probably will have at least one more nomination to the Supreme Court.
A second term is sure to produce turnover in his Cabinet. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has made it clear he wants to leave at the end of Obama's first term but is expected to remain in the post until a successor is confirmed. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Obama's rival for the presidency four years ago, is ready to leave. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta isn't expected to stay on.
Some Americans were hopeful for progress in Obama's second term.
"He may not have done a great job in my mind but I kinda trust him," Jerry Shul said Wednesday morning in New York's Times Square. "And I feel like he's gonna keep trying and I feel like when people keep trying in you favor things work out. I have faith in him, I have faith he will get with the Republicans and get something done."
Elsewhere on the ballot, voters in Maine and Maryland became the first to approve same-sex marriage by popular vote while Washington state and Colorado legalized recreational use of marijuana.
Obama claimed at least seven of the nine swing states, most notably Ohio, seen as the big prize. He also prevailed in Iowa, New Hampshire, Colorado, Nevada, Virginia and Wisconsin. Romney got North Carolina.
Florida was too close to call Wednesday morning. The unofficial count had Obama with a 46,000-vote lead, but Florida historically has left as many as 5 percent of its votes uncounted until after Election Day.
Overall, Obama won 25 states and the District of Columbia. Romney won 24 states.
It was a more measured victory than four years ago, when Obama claimed 365 electoral votes to Arizona Sen. John McCain's 173, and won 53 percent of the popular vote.
Preliminary figures indicate fewer people participated this time. Associated Press figures showed that about 118 million people had voted in the White House race, but that number will rise as more votes are counted. In 2008, 131 million people voted, according to the Federal Election Commission.
I'm guessing half the people who voted for Obama were simply voting against neocon, pro war Republicans and half of the people who voted for Romney were simply voting against Obama  because he is black and got  promoted by the media during the 2008 primaries..
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The Republican party is a dead entity that had its heyday with Ronald Reagan who is dead and buried. It is over and time to move on by massively cutting defense and taxing the wealthy who are only dead weight sinking the USA.
Clinton left a surplus and Bush #2 wasted it on a murderous war on Iraq. Obama would be stupid to pay off Bush's bills. Let a Republican pay off these bills in 2016 if one can get elected. They are even talking about another Bush in 2016.
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1988-2016 Â may have brought forth 3 generations of these mutated Bush freaks. The change needs to happen here not in Syria or Iran.
Obumbler scares me but not nearly as much as the EPA. We didn't hire em, we can't fire em, but they can sure ruin your life, and we just gave them a free pass. I can see $6.00 gas by mid summer and it's going to get worse after that. This nation moves on wheels and wheels need fuel. Everything we eat, drink and wear comes on wheels, not to mention the fun stuff so just watch the prices rise. Hope I'm wrong but I don't think so.
I disagree as i believe President Obama is a strong supporter of alternative energy - Solar, Wind, etc.
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If the GOP works with him instead of blocking his energy policies, maybe we'll be less dependant on foreign oil and teh gas prices will drop.Â
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Takes everyone cooperating to make it happen.
Predictions
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1) Taxes are going up on EVERYONE. Liberal politicians may squawk about this one, but deep down they know everyone has got to pay more.Â
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2) We will not go over the fiscal cliff and sequestration will not happen...YET. They'll have a compromise for another 18 months or so.Â
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Elections have consequences.Â
Get back to work GOP and Democrats... the deficit is not going to reduce itself. Let Bush's tax cuts expire and don't compromise again on that. If the GOP want those large tax cuts to happen to defense they better be ready to bend over if they are not more cooperative this time around! Bring our troops home and invest the money we are wasting out there back here at home. We have cities that still need to be rebuilt and we have the people here to do it. Make sure everyone pays their fair share of taxes... I pay my part gladly and don't just extreme loopholes so make sure you kill those off as well.. just like Romney's less tax payment than his secretary BS!
Beautifully written! Concise and specific - may I borrow the body of your statement in writing to my congressman?  That is the message that we need to share with congress and get them moving.
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Thank you for your message regarding legislation on the national popular vote. Washington has already enacted this legislation, codified at RCW 29A.56.300, and it can be found online at www.leg.wa.gov in the "Laws and Agency Rules" section at the left side of the page. All of the states that adopt the same legislation agree to designate that state's electoral votes to the candidate who wins the largest number of popular voters, tabulated nationally, rather than awarding those electoral votes to the candidate who wins the largest number of votes in the particular state. This agreement takes effect, however, only when the agreement is enacted by enough states to constitute a majority of all the electoral votes in the country. Although Washington has enacted the agreement, not enough other states have done so to trigger its application in 2012. I hope this information is helpful. Thank you for sharing your views with the Attorney General's Office. Have a good day.
Â
Sincerely,
Judy Gaul
Executive Assistant to the Attorney General State of Washington
judyg@atg.wa.gov
 @Pro Mitt Romney Damn, you're about stupid.
The task is not "new." Â It has been urgent for the past four years.
@CountryCharacter - Erm, no. George Bush had 8 years to create the sludge Obama's been trying to clean up - Rome wasn't built in a day and the Bush/Cheney crisis will take time to eradicate.Â
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We should be thinking about what we can do as citizens to help fix the problems, after all, we don't want the government to give hand outs so we should start looking after one another.
 @Smokin Bear  @CountryCharacterÂ
Bush left with unemployment under 7%. With a deficit of $10 T and deficits of half a $T.
Yah, Bush left a mess... Obama has made it much, much worse.
In 4 years you'll still blame Bush, and probably think repealing the 22nd Amend would be a good idea to give Obama more time.
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By that time on current trajectories, we'll have $20-25 T in debt, $2 T deficits and labor force participation will be under 60% and real unemployment over 20%.
@Robinsnest  - If you were worth debating, I might bother, but you're just another FOX News drone.Â
 @Smokin Bear YAY!!! Record time in throwing down the race card and showing your hand. Oh and by the way, Obama is not African American! He wasn't born in Africa(or was he?) and his mother was a WHITE woman, so why is he being considered a black man? He is mixed. No more black than white.
@JCM1776 @CountryCharacter -Â Funny - you know nothing about me but you feel entitled to make assumptions about what I think of Presidential term limits (which was ratified in 1951 because FDR had been elected to office 4 consecutive times, and the limits were designed to prevent dictatorship from emerging) and have the gall to state that I would support repealing the 22nd Amendment.Â
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So I am compelled to return the favor:
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I noticed that some of the more rabid GOP mob have a problem with Obama being an African American and I wonder if that isn't part of the reason the GOP House is so resistant as well as the Far right voters being so rigidly enraged that a "Black Man" got the vote again.
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Based on your comments it sounds like you'd be happy if the 14th Amendment was repealed: Ah yes, that would bring back  the good old days of slavery - forced labor and subjugation of people you feel are inferior to you for profit - how much fun is that? You would get to whip them too, or rape the slave women at your whim, or throw them off of ships chained together for fun, or maybe you enjoy hurting little children.
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I imagine that none of those things are true of you, but ya see where assumption gets ya? That's the point.
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People need to let go of their need to feel superior. While i voted for him, I haven't rubbed Obama's win in anyone's face - in fact, I've said over and over that I believe people need to look after one another and instead of complaining on a forum, work together to improve our lives. What I am finding is that Republicans - not all but a good number have been unforgivably rude, raging over lost senate seats as well as the Presidential race.Â
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The election is over so let's work with what we've got and keep moving forward.Â
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While you're at it, please up the dosage or get yourself to a Sylvan Learning Center....LOL!!!
 @Smokin Bear  @CountryCharacter And four years from now the next dem will still be blaming Bush.  The BS just never stops.
 @StreetPizza You are a brain-dead lemming and a troll.
 @Smokin Bear Do we know for a fact Bush was not invited? Or was he invited and politely declined?
Right. And if the election had gone the other way, guys like you would be so distressed you would be jumping from cliffs en masse.Â
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I'll take being a troll over brain-dead lemming any day of the week.
How much are you shooting up?
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You're so far from reason or intelligent thought that I can only pity you.Â
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Poor little troll....hope that you can find your way home.
@Smokin Bear Yeah, yeah, yeah. And Obama's like Stalin, Biden's like Malenkov, and Hillary is like a transexual version of Bulganin. Spare us the dumb historical comparisons, Bush has been out of office for four years and the mess he left is nothing like the mess the current Premier has made of it which is likely to pale in comparison to the mess he will continue to make out of it.
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If you could extract your head from your colon you might be able the reason it out. And we might be able to hear you "LOL." I await your Hyena-like guffaw.
@Gino @Smokin Bear - Yes, Gino, Bush was like Hitler, Cheney resembled Goering and Karl Rove was a doppelganger for Joseph Goebbels.
 @Smokin Bear Like Hitler?
LOL! So, why wasn't Bush invited to the GOP conventions during this election?
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 Oh yeah, he and Cheney are embarassments to the Republican party and they wanted distance from them...Reality is that Bush and Cheney should have been indicted for war crimes and treason -  from 2000 to 2008 they and their cronies dragged our nation into an illegal war, bankrupted the coffers, created trillions in debt and invoked the deaths of thousands of people for corporate profit....Yeah, Bush and Cheney and Paul Wolfowitz and Condoleeza Rice and Don Rumsfeld have a lot to answer for:
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Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it.
In a nation full of children, Santa Claus will always win. Â
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The mandate is to get something done in Washington THAT MAKES SENSE on both sides. It was pretty interesting to see all the dems at Obama's victory celebration last night waving American flags....looked a little like Michael Dukakis riding in the tank trying to seem patriotic.Â
 @swatguy1 You mean like a cop trying to act like a decent person.
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http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=small%20dick%20syndrome
Here's the road Obama is leading this once great nation. http://youtu.be/OTSQozWP-rM
While I am happy for the election outcome, I am saddened for the people who believe the end of the world is upon us. It is not. Now is the time to accept that we are not all the same. We do not all believe in the same things. What is dividing this country is the fact that tolerance for such differences is very low. I do not find that to be very American. Just saying.
 @alaska_dreamin The end of the world won't be here until December 21st ;)
@Melissa Foster @alaska_dreamin - Cool, that will get me out of Jury Duty... :-)
 @Melissa Foster I know because Woody Harrelson told me in 2012. :-D
START THOSE PRINTING PRESSES!!!
There's a lot of outstretched hands out there people, and we need fill 'em with free stuff.
Get the Chinese on the phone, we're gonna need to borrow a whole lot more.
Now I'm off to get in the first 18 of many to come on my next four year vacation!!
@William H. Bonney - Could you cite your sources for those outrageous claims or are you just repeating nonsense that you've heard?
 @Smokin Bear My source? Where the f- have you been for the last four years, liberal La-La Land? WAKE UP!!!!
 @William H. Bonney Congress is in control of the purse strings genius.... I would go on vacation too if I was him why stick around for the failure of Congress to act? (good grief)
Some sober thoughts on the AM today:
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To take from one, becuase it is thought that his own industry and that of his fathers has acquired too much, in order to spare others who, or whose fathers have not excercised equal industry and skill , is to voilate arbitrarily the first principle of association, "the guarantee to every one of a free excercise of his industry, and the fruets acquired by it"Â Thomas Jefferson.
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Six in 10 voters said in exit polls that taxes should be increased, and nearly half of the voters said taxes should be increased on incomes over $250,000, as Obama has called for.
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"Its very clear form the exit polling that a majority of Americans recognize that we need to share responsibility for reducing the deficit" Maryland rep. Chris Van Hollen, the top Democrat of the House Budget Committee, told CNN. "That means asking higher income earners to contribute more to reducing the deficit.
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In addition the reduction of the deficit needs to be undertaken by those who depend on the redistributions of the earnings of others to get by, thorugh the method of getting off their kiesters and start earning a living for themselves, not standing with hands out waiting for someone else to pay THEIR bills. - Woodswalker
America voted for gridlock and gridlock is what we'll get.
 @whatshesaid Only by the likes of you and your "hate" and outright bigoted remark... Your twisted logic is an incurable cancer upon our society pertaining to party divisions based solely on group ideology.... BOO! :(
 @Funky-Munky What did I say that isn't true and where do you see any hate or bigotry in that remark? The Congress is still divided. America voted it that way. Whatever you believe is the correct path, there is someone else who disagrees with you and Congress reflects that. I simply said that in the course of the day, nothing has changed in the make-up of the US Congress. We had gridlock before and we voted it in again. To liken me to cancer or a bigot for my opinions which are based on absolute facts only goes to reflect your own shortcomings.
 @Funky-Munky What did he say that was bigoted? Just because whatshesaid doesn't agree with you, me or anyone else doesn't make he/she a bigot. Freedom of speech applies to all points of view. That's what makes this country great.
It is simple. The GOP has shown thet are willing to limit freedom in America and the American people are not.
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You may not like abortion, gay marriage, women's right to equal pay and may like the idea that states may probe women against thier will and force women to seek the approval of their employer in what should be a private issue between her and her doctor. You may like the idea that the GOP wants to spend 2 trillion dollars more on defense that is not needed and yet have no problem letting our ifnrastructure crumble out from under us.
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Those you Obama haters want to continue on your war path and hope he fails, please get out of the way and let the rest of us work together and keep  America the best country on earth.
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God Bless America and God Bless President Obama
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And God Bless ALL members of Congress
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 @snoopy84 Then get out your checkbook snoopy! If you want Obama and his programs then you pay for them. Lets see how devoted a follower all you Obama people are. You now owe about 50,000 per person... mostly to the Chinese. So write your checks out to today to celebrate your victory.
@snoopy84 This is where Obama is taking the once great nation of the USA http://youtu.be/OTSQozWP-rM
@IhateWashington You did not really show me this video! Remember, Bush put 2 wars, 2 tax cuts and a drug program on money he barrowed from China.
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Obama did not put in this position. If Romney had it his way in the auto bailout, china would be making our cars.
I really don't have the energy to keep up with how bad America and Obama are game, people on the right want to keep this up for the next 4 years will only be damaging.
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Are you not tired of divide? 2 parties working together ensures security for all.
snoopy84 and the rest of your ilk.......I would LOVE to see the looks on your faces and hear what you have to say when you realize what this man has in store for this country!!! The writing was on the wall, but most were not paying attention. Laws have been passed unknown to most, but will not be introduced until AFTER Jan when he returns to office. Just watch!
Well, what if you're wrong? Will you have the personal integrity to admit it and apologize for being so blatantly rude to people you don't agree with?
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After January, what if things improve for everyone, what will you say then? Just asking.
@countrygalfm You forget the GOP house.
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"Laws have been passed unknown to most" then you go on to say they will be introduced.
A passed law is " enacted" and a new law is "introduced. Please pick one.
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@countrygalfm Well, I guess the whole FOX Â crew and limbuagh will be sharing a jail cell.
I got to ask, what is the bill number and when was it passed?
snoopy84... I am refering to one law in particular that will not be enacted until he returns to office in Jan. To have done so any sooner, he would not have been re-elected! Did you know that to publicly criticize the president, the secret service can seize and throw you into prison, at their disgression?? That was in the news!! The bombs will not be dropped all at once.....little by little in the next four years.
 @countrygalfm The look on my face will be mild amusement as nothing out of the ordinary happens after January.
Nicely stated Snoopy. I agree and applaud you.Â
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Too many people have become saturated with indoctrinated hatred for anyone who doesn't fit their rigid lockstep ideology.Â
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We are all Americans - all citizens of this country and we should be working together to improve our social and political cultures. Adopting decency over ego might be a good forward step
 @snoopy84 I'd respectfully disagree. I think a large number of BOTH parties want to limit our freedoms, just different ones in different ways. To note just the most obvious, on gay marriage and abortion and drugs, Rs favor limits or prohibition. On guns, financial freedoms, general healthcare, property rights, Dems favor limits, regulations, and prohibitions. Neither are really in favor of the general principle of individual freedom and responsibility.
@RN1 Even Romney said regulation on banks was needed. Keep in mind, the banks used your money to gamble with, investors gambled with your money in hedge funds. So regulations say they can't, your money has to separate from the gambling money.
As for guns, according to the NRA, we should have had the restrictive gun laws when Obama was eleted in 08-did not happen. In pour neck of the woods, small businesses is growing, so what financial freedoms have been lost-none, you may spend, make, waste, grow your money any way yo wish. To many small business owners supported Obama to say his policies are crushing.
Obamacare-why should we pay for people who choose to use the ER, why should hold fund raisers to pay the balance of ones medical care even if they are insured, why should people be denied health care because they has a blip in their life, why should a family go brankrupt over medical bills?
The US constitution demands the government provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare for the people. Protecting the people from dying for lack of insurance is promoting general welfare.
Ever notice how the "welfare" part is missed? Doctors used to be be doctors becuase it was a passion to heal thier fellow man, now it is a business and do it for money, lots of money. I don't begrudge anyone making money but making it off of sick people is sick in it's self. Insurance companiesn and hospitals are the biggest offenders. Anyone who spent time in a hospatal knows-they got bills for thing they did not need and insurance did not cover. Who is losing out in this deal?
 @snoopy84 Bravo Snoopy well said! Encore post please... :D) God bless you and yours!