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122 votes
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40% | |||
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31 votes
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10% | |||
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11 votes
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4% | |||
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116 votes
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38% | |||
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23 votes
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8% | |||
[...]
Somebody cried....Thank you Sodahead.
Me.4-times Now to 3-day Detention...lol~!!!
http://www.sodahead.com/unite...
My White House."He should say ,,"My Corrupt White House."
Because they are MORON's....for the Most Part...
I agree to your smaller role for government comment. Our government is to big and now they have one branch spying on the other and everyone is insecure of everything.
We need to cut the bull and simplify. You know, the KISS theory.
KISS = Keep It Simple Stupid.
"For every problem... there's a simple easy to understand wrong answer."
If we got rid of laws against child porn, there would be smaller government ... If we did away with the lines on the road and you could just drive on whatever side you wanted there'd be less government. Some things the government does are are pretty cool. I like having GPS satelites... and the ingredients on my food products make me more free because I have more information not less free.
It's Republicans who started warrantless wiretapping people and signed the Patriot Act. It's Republicans who gave us the Drug War and started taking people's houses without due process... if anybody is for larger more intrusive government it's Republicans. (Unless you're a big oil or energy or pharmacutical company).
THIS POLL was a Stolen Poll as YOU Posted the Opposite One a day or so ago...YOU were the Orig. Creator...LIBTURDS only have the Mind to Take what Others Do...
Just Like They TAKE from Others thru Their Entitlement Programs...
Posted: 05/30/2012 12:53 am
President Barack Obama speaks during a reception in honor of Jewish American Heritage Month on May 17, 2011, in the East Room of the White House.
A group of rabbis and leaders from the Conservative movement of Judaism are commending President Barack Obama after a White House meeting on Tuesday, when they questioned him on issues ranging from the environment and immigration to the Israel-Palestine conflict and sanctions against Iran.
The informal meeting was held in the Roosevelt Room of the White House with 19 leaders from the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism (USCJ), which is the primary organization of the Conservative Jewish movement. It was scheduled to only be with White House Chief of Staff Jack Lew, but the president made an unscheduled appearance.
Rabbi Steven Wernick, chief executive officer of the USCJ, said the meeting was "warm and productive" and attempted to position his denomination as crucial to Obama's support among Jews.
“Going into this upcoming election, the role of the Conservative Jewish community is critical; it quite literally constitutes the swing vote," he said in a statement. "While the Orthodox community can be counted on to v...
Posted: 05/30/2012 12:53 am
President Barack Obama speaks during a reception in honor of Jewish American Heritage Month on May 17, 2011, in the East Room of the White House.
A group of rabbis and leaders from the Conservative movement of Judaism are commending President Barack Obama after a White House meeting on Tuesday, when they questioned him on issues ranging from the environment and immigration to the Israel-Palestine conflict and sanctions against Iran.
The informal meeting was held in the Roosevelt Room of the White House with 19 leaders from the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism (USCJ), which is the primary organization of the Conservative Jewish movement. It was scheduled to only be with White House Chief of Staff Jack Lew, but the president made an unscheduled appearance.
Rabbi Steven Wernick, chief executive officer of the USCJ, said the meeting was "warm and productive" and attempted to position his denomination as crucial to Obama's support among Jews.
“Going into this upcoming election, the role of the Conservative Jewish community is critical; it quite literally constitutes the swing vote," he said in a statement. "While the Orthodox community can be counted on to vote predominantly Republican and the Reform community largely Democratic, Conservative Judaism –- as the central address of contemporary Judaism -- represents the epicenter of our people’s political allegiances."
According to a press release, the president thanked the rabbis and lay leaders for the work they do in communities around the country and "reiterated his unshakeable commitment to Israel’s security."
The USCJ represents 630 congregations in North America with just above one million total members. Of the 6,588,000 American Jews, the Conservative tradition has the second largest membership. The largest is the 1.5 million-member Reform movement with nearly 900 congregations. Orthodox, Reconstructionist and other movements have smaller followings.
While American Jews tend to largely vote Democratic, there have been claims that the president may lose support among Jews because of his policies toward the Middle East and his shaky relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. But polls have shown that Obama, who won 78 percent of the Jewish vote in 2008, continues to have similar levels of support from American Jews. An April poll from the Public Religion Research Institute found that 62 percent of Jewish voters would vote for Obama over a generic Republican candidate. Among those who previously voted for Obama, 86 percent said they wanted him reelected. The poll also found that the economy is the top issue among most Jewish voters, while Israel is the top issue among 4 percent of the demographic.
More recently, the president's announcement that he supports same-sex marriage was hailed by the USCJ and the Union for Reform Judaism, but was criticized by Orthodox groups, including the Orthodox Union.