Euphemisms are causing the English language to erode
* A euphemism is defined as a non-harmful phrase or word used to substitute another word or phrase that is seen as, in some way, unpleasant.
* A euphemism is defined as a non-harmful phrase or word used to substitute another word or phrase that is seen as, in some way, unpleasant.
* A euphemism is defined as a non-harmful phrase or word used to substitute another word or phrase that is seen as, in some way, unpleasant.
Last Friday, a massive, across-the-board spending cut, known as the "Sequester," went into effect.
This past year, as a culmination of a 12 year commitment, I became an Eagle Scout-the highest rank achievable within the Boy Scouts of America.
Last Wednesday Secretary of State Hillary Clinton testified before a Congressional Investigation Committee related to the September 2012 attack on the United States consulate in Benghazi, Libya, which resulted in the deaths of four Americans, including the Libyan ambassador.
We have heard it before. Congresswoman Michele Bachmann summed up the Republicans' position on the debt ceiling in 2011, when she famously stated that Congress would not give President Barack Obama "a blank check for spending," her term for raising the debt ceiling. Now once again, our nation stands perilously close to reaching the debt ceiling, the statutory limit on how much debt the United States government may hold at any one time.
I finished my last final exam, and flew home to Houston, on Dec. 14-the date of the Newtown Elementary School massacre.
I have noticed that there seems to be a large, environmentally conscious presence on campus, perpetually attempting to change policies through campaigns and petitions.
The president has just been reelected, and his party has just expanded its majority in the Senate to 55 seats. However, knowing from precedent that the minority party in the Senate would again obstruct the administration's priorities by the constant use of filibusters, action was taken. The senate majority leader hatched a plan to reform the filibuster, which was derided by his critics, specifically the minority leader, as a "nuclear option." I am not talking about current events; I'm talking about congress in the year 2005. In 2005, the Senate Republicans, then the majority party, sought to reform the use of the filibuster, the obstructive tactic used to delay indefinitely the conclusion of a debate on a specific motion. A filibuster, under current rules, may only be ended through a vote of three-fifths of the Senate (60 members). Concerned that Senate Democrats would filibuster and kill progress on some of the more ambitious proposals of President Bush's second term, including the privatization of Social Security, the Senate majority leader, Bill Frist, moved to reform the filibuster to a simple majority vote.
About two years ago, issues of controlling the nation's deficit became a top priority of the new, Republican-controlled congress.
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