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Last Night, After Weeks of Long and Difficult Negotiations Over Our National Budget, Leaders of Future
Last Night, After Weeks of Long and Difficult Negotiations Over Our National Budget, Leaders of Future
both parties came together to avert a government shutdown, cut spending, and invest in our
future.
This is good news for the American people. It means that small businesses can get the loans they
need, our families can get the mortgages they applied for, folks can visit our national parks and
museums, and hundreds of thousands of Americans will get their paychecks on time – including
our brave men and women in uniform.
This is an agreement to invest in our country’s future while making the largest annual spending
cut in our history. Like any compromise, this required everyone to give ground on issues that
were important to them. I certainly did. Some of the cuts we agreed to will be painful –
programs people rely on will be cut back; needed infrastructure projects will be delayed. And I
would not have made these cuts in better circumstances. But we also prevented this important
debate from being overtaken by politics and unrelated disagreements on social issues. And
beginning to live within our means is the only way to protect the investments that will help
America compete for new jobs – investments in our kids’ education and student loans; in clean
energy and life-saving medical research.
Reducing spending while still investing in the future is just common sense. That’s what families
do in tough times. They sacrifice where they can, even if it’s hard, to afford what’s really
important.
A few months ago, I was able to sign a tax cut for American families because both parties
worked through their differences and found common ground. Now, the same cooperation has
made it possible for us to move forward with the biggest annual spending cut in history. And it’s
my sincere hope that we can continue to come together as we face the many difficult challenges
that lie ahead – from creating jobs and growing our economy to educating our children and
reducing our long-term deficits.
That’s our responsibility. That’s what the American people expect us to do. And it’s what the
American people deserve.
Last night, after weeks of long and difficult negotiations over our national budget, leaders of
both parties came together to avert a government shutdown, cut spending, and invest in our
future.
[ Old English stīeran < Germanic]
[14th century. Via French <
Latin futurus "going to be"]
[ Old English nēowe < Indo-European]
[13th century. Via Anglo-Norman and
Old French < Latin populus <
Etruscan]
This is good news for the American people. It means that small businesses can get the loans
they need, our families can get the mortgages they applied for, folks can visit our national parks
and museums, and hundreds of thousands of Americans will get their paychecks on time –
including our brave men and women in uniform.
This is an agreement to invest in our country’s future while making the largest annual spending
cut in our history. Like any compromise, this required everyone to give ground on issues that
were important to them. I certainly did. Some of the cuts we agreed to will be painful –
programs people rely on will be cut back; needed infrastructure projects will be delayed. And I
would not have made these cuts in better circumstances.
But we also prevented this important debate from being overtaken by politics and unrelated
disagreements on social issues. And beginning to live within our means is the only way to
protect the investments that will help America compete for new jobs – investments in our kids’
education and student loans; in clean energy and life-saving medical research.
Reducing spending while still investing in the future is just common sense. That’s what families
do in tough times. They sacrifice where they can, even if it’s hard, to afford what’s really
important.
[13th century. Via French < Latin [14th century. < the past participle of Old
signum "mark, sign"] English āgān "go away, pass by" < gān
"go"]
A few months ago, I was able to sign a tax cut for American families because both parties
worked through their differences and found common ground. Now, the same cooperation has
made it possible for us to move forward with the biggest annual spending cut in history. And
it’s my sincere hope that we can continue to come together as we face the many difficult
challenges that lie ahead – from creating jobs and growing our economy to educating our
children and reducing our long-term deficits.
That’s our responsibility. That’s what the American people expect us to do. And it’s what the
American people deserve.
LastReplay.w3g
Last night, after weeks of long and difficult negotiations over our national budget, leaders of
both parties came together to avert a government shutdown, cut spending, and invest in our
future.
This is good news for the American people. It means that small businesses can get the loans
they need, our families can get the mortgages they applied for, folks can visit our national parks
and museums, and hundreds of thousands of Americans will get their paychecks on time –
including our brave men and women in uniform.
This is an agreement to invest in our country’s future while making the largest annual spending
cut in our history. Like any compromise, this required everyone to give ground on issues that
were important to them.
I certainly did. Some of the cuts we agreed to will be painful – programs people rely on will be
cut back; needed infrastructure projects will be delayed. And I would not have made these cuts
in better circumstances.
But we also prevented this important debate from being overtaken by politics and unrelated
disagreements on social issues.
And beginning to live within our means is the only way to protect the investments that will help
America compete for new jobs – investments in our kids’ education and student loans; in clean
energy and life-saving medical research.
Reducing spending while still investing in the future is just common sense. That’s what families
do in tough times. They sacrifice where they can, even if it’s hard, to afford what’s really
important.
A few months ago, I was able to sign a tax cut for American families because both parties
worked through their differences and found common ground. Now, the same cooperation has
made it possible for us to move forward with the biggest annual spending cut in history. And it’s
my sincere hope that we can continue to come together as we face the many difficult challenges
that lie ahead – from creating jobs and growing our economy to educating our children and
reducing our long-term deficits.
That’s our responsibility. That’s what the American people expect us to do. And it’s what the
American people deserve.
03 - 1776.3gp
[PRESIDENTIAL WEEKLY ADDRESS PHASE A.b END OF]
Last night, after weeks of long and difficult negotiations over our national budget, leaders of
both parties came together to avert a government shutdown, cut spending, and invest in our
future.
This is good news for the American people. It means that small businesses can get the loans
they need, our families can get the mortgages they applied for,
folks can visit our national parks and museums, and hundreds of thousands of Americans will get
their paychecks on time – including our brave men and women in uniform.
This is an agreement to invest in our country’s future while making the largest annual spending
cut in our history. Like any compromise, this required everyone to give ground on issues that
were important to them. I certainly did. Some of the cuts we agreed to will be painful –
programs people rely on will be cut back; needed infrastructure projects will be delayed. And I
would not have made these cuts in better circumstances.
But we also prevented this important debate from being overtaken by politics and unrelated
disagreements on social issues. And beginning to live within our means is the only way to
protect the investments that will help America compete for new jobs – investments in our kids’
education and student loans; in clean energy and life-saving medical research.
Reducing spending while still investing in the future is just common sense. That’s what families
do in tough times. They sacrifice where they can, even if it’s hard, to afford what’s really
important.
A few months ago, I was able to sign a tax cut for American families because both parties
worked through their differences and found common ground.
Now, the same cooperation has made it possible for us to move forward with the biggest annual
spending cut in history. And it’s my sincere hope that we can continue to come together as we
face the many difficult challenges that lie ahead – from creating jobs and growing our economy
to educating our children and reducing our long-term deficits.
That’s our responsibility. That’s what the American people expect us to do. And it’s what the
American people deserve.
08 Prospero's Speech.3gp
Last night, after weeks of long and difficult negotiations over our national budget, leaders of
both parties came together to avert a government shutdown, cut spending, and invest in our
future.
and abandon everything. But there the realm. But prisoners and outlaws
came to him in the night the are excepted according to the law of
the realm; also people of a land
apostle Peter, and severely
chastised him, (19) because he at war against us, and the merchants,
This is good news for the American people. It means that small businesses can get the loans
they need, our families can get the mortgages they applied for, folks can visit our national parks
and museums, and hundreds of thousands of Americans will get their paychecks on time –
including our brave men and women in uniform.
Tombs and temples are certainly impressive and informative, but
they tell only part of the story. To get to the heart of Early Dynastic
Egypt, to understand life in the Nile valley and how it developed,
we must escape the alluring world-view promoted by the court and
look instead at individual communities and regions.
This is an agreement to invest in our country’s future while making the largest annual spending
cut in our history. Like any compromise, this required everyone to give ground on issues that
were important to them.
Only after the middle of the eleventh VI. Branded clerics and paladins are the chosen of
century did popes begin to assume a the gods, and their prayers may be tolerated on
themselves and groupmates, but not on the Crusader.
role at the head of a movement to This may ONLY BE DONE if the priest is of the same
reform the Western church, to free it FOLLOWING (see number 7) as the Crusader, otherwise
from the dominance of secular rulers no prayers should be called upon. This will probably
mean that in a group with two Crusaders, that no
and from entanglement in secular prayers may be tolerated. Clerics and paladins must
affairs. still not invoke magical devices in the presence
I certainly did. Some of the cuts we agreed to will be painful – programs people rely on will be
cut back; needed infrastructure projects will be delayed. And I would not have made these cuts
in better circumstances.
01. Born In The U.S.A..3gp 2. ancient Greek and Roman authors: the authors of
ancient Greece and Rome, whose writings form the basis of
the classics as a subject of study
But we also prevented this important debate from being overtaken by politics and unrelated
disagreements on social issues. And beginning to live within our means is the only way to
protect the investments that will help America compete for new jobs – investments in our kids’
education and student loans; in clean energy and life-saving medical research.
Reducing spending while still investing in the future is just common sense. That’s what families
do in tough times. They sacrifice where they can, even if it’s hard, to afford what’s really
important.
A few months ago, I was able to sign a tax cut for American families because both parties
worked through their differences and found common ground. Now, the same cooperation has
made it possible for us to move forward with the biggest annual spending cut in history. And it’s
my sincere hope that we can continue to come together as we face the many difficult challenges
that lie ahead – from creating jobs and growing our economy to educating our children and
reducing our long-term deficits.
That’s our responsibility. That’s what the American people expect us to do. And it’s what the
American people deserve.