[Swlugevents] Consumer Trends article shows how a stay-at-home mom makes over $7k from home

ProfitFromHome ProfitFromHome at vwxaesd.us
Tue Sep 24 15:45:01 UTC 2013


Consumer Trends article shows how a stay-at-home mom makes over $7k from home

http://www.vwxaesd.us/2348/151/332/1249/2668.10tt74103107AAF13.php





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lowest rating hes 
received on health care since his 13-point negative rating in December 2011 
(42-55 percent). Seven percent of voters say health care is the most 
important issue facing the country, which puts it well behind the economy 
(42 percent), the federal deficit (17 percent) and terrorism (9 percent) 
on the priority list. Health care still tops guns (5 percent), Social 
Security (5 percent), immigration (4 percent) and foreign policy (1 percent).These 
Fox News health care poll results are based on landline and cell 
phone interviews with 1,009 randomly chosen registered voters nationwide. 
The poll was conducted under the joint direction of Anderson Robbins Research 
(D) and Shaw & Company Research (R) from April 20 - 22. 
The full poll has a margin of sampling error of plus or 
minus three percentage points.Medical MarijuanaAlmost all voters -- 85 percent 
-- say its okay for adults to use medical marijuana if it 
is prescribed by a physician.Still, theres some doubt about its use: The 
poll, finds 30 percent of voters think people who smoke medical marijuana 
truly need it for medical purposes, while nearly half -- 47 percent 
-- think those people just want to smoke pot.In general, voters are 
about evenly divided over legalizing marijuana: 46 percent of voters favor 
legalization, while 49 oppose. Democrats favor the legal route by 57-39 
percent; Republicans oppose it, 62-33 percent.These Fox News poll results 
on marijuana are based on
This April 2013 image shows Yosemite Valley at Yosemite National Park in 
California.APTwo months after the sequester hit, the Department of Interior 
continues to warn of coast-to-coast cuts for the country's national parks 
-- and even the partial shutdown of a critical flood warning system.But 
Sen. Tom Coburn says there's "no shortage of potential savings," pointing 
out that the department is nevertheless spending millions on newly created 
monuments and landmarks.The Oklahoma Republican, who has been hounding federal 
agencies for weeks about questionable spending under the cloud of sequester, 
aired his grievances with the Interior Department in a letter to Secretary 
Sally Jewell Tuesday."It makes little sense to expand the number of sites 
at the same time the budget of every other park is being 
cut and visitors are being turned away from visiting the White House," 
Coburn wrote.Coburn pointedly questioned department efforts to name new 
sites and expand others -- decisions that will contribute to the department's 
annual costs. Coburn said the National Park Service has designated 13 new 
historic landmarks and three new monuments since the sequester hit March 
1. One of those landmarks, he noted, is a whiskey distillery -- 
the George T. Stagg Distillery in Kentucky. Other newly created landmarks 
include the Connecticut home of abolitionist Harriet Beecher Stowe, the 
historic bridge crossed by civil rights marchers in Selma, Ala., and an 
arti

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