why is it always referred to as a war or fight or battle? if the peoples interest was really it for both sides seems rhetoric would be more debate then adversarial.
GUN CONTROL
President Barack Obama vows to crack down
on gun violence in
the wake of the school massacre last month in Newtown, Connecticut, the latest in a series
of shooting rampages over the past decade.
According to a USA Today/Gallup Poll, 58
percent of Americans now back tougher gun laws, but 51 percent oppose Obama's
call to outlaw so-called assault weapons.
A sharply divided Congress is awaiting a
broad review of gun violence headed by Vice President Joe Biden.
IMMIGRATION
Hispanic voters last year helped Obama win
a second term and Democrats to increase their clout in Congress.
Republicans took notice and want to win
Hispanic support in the 2014 elections. One step toward that goal would be for
Republicans to become more open to immigration reform.
The big question is how far Republicans
would go to provide a path toward citizenship for illegal immigrants, estimated
to number up to 12 million in the United States.
any change referred to now is written as a light going on and republicans need to do this or that, but in that circumstance this or that is just a means to an end that culminates to them getting back in ans day one back to what they know, thumb on gov't.