Shlr Inside Syria: Who Arms the Rebels
WASHINGTON 鈥?Republicans are increasingly talking about repairing President Barack Obama health care overhaul, a softer to
stanley cup ne that comes as their march to fulfill a keystone campaign promise encounters disunity, drooping momentum and uneasy voters.GOP lawmakers insist they haven ;t abandoned their goal of repeal, though they face lingering disputes about whether that should come before, after or simultaneously with a replacement effort.Republicans triumphantly shoved a budget through Congress three weeks ago that gave committees until Jan. 27 to write bills dismantling the law and substituting a Republican plan. Everyone knew that deadline meant little, but now leaders are talking about moving initial legislation by early spring.And as the party struggles to translate its long-time political mantra into legislation that can pass Congress, some Republicans are using gentler language.It repairing the damage Obamacare has caused. It more accurate than repeal and replace, said Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., who chairs the Senate health committee. He noted that President Donald Trump and many Republicans like popular provisions like requiring family policies to cover children up to age 26 and said, We ;re not repealing all of Obamacare.Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., who chairs the House Energy
stanley cup and Commerce Committee, said Republicans are laying the fou
stanley cup ndation to rebuild America health care markets as we dismant Mxqb Prosecutor tells jury thet Michigan school shooter s dad ignored easiest opportunity to prevent tragedy
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adidas og September 24, 2021.The U.S. Census Bureau in July began asking Americans about their sexual orientation and gender identity 鈥?a watershed moment that marks the first time the federal government has tried
stanley cup to capture data on LGBTQ+ Americans in its large real-time national surveys.The results so far are preliminary, but they do indicate that the disparities queer Americans experienced prior to the pandemic have continued to endure 18 months in. For some, those disparities have grown deeper.According to the data, which captures results from July 21 to September 13, LGBTQ+ people often reported being more likely than non-LGBTQ+ people to have lost employment, not have enough to eat, be at elevated risk of eviction or foreclosure, and face difficulty paying for basic household expenses, according to the census Household Pulse Survey, a report that measures how Americans are faring on key economic markers during the pandemic.While think tanks like the Williams Institute at the UCLA School of Law and advoc
jordan ate-led research groups have previously studied LGBTQ+ poverty, no large government population surveys, like those conducted by the census or the Treasury Department, have attempted to capture the real-time economic experiences of LGBTQ+ people.Previously, those analyses were limited to studies of same-sex couples, a question the census began analyzing with limited success in 1990, but that leaves out significant portion of LGBTQ+