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Source: http://twitter.com/IsraelNewsStory/statuses/151102272795967488
Israel National News
Source: http://twitter.com/IsraelNewsStory/statuses/151102272795967488
ITN
WASHINGTON ? On a political high, President Barack Obama capped a bruising year by securing a tax cut for millions of Americans ? an achievement that overshadowed Washington's deepening dysfunction and the slow progress of the economy on his watch.
The White House has ended a year with a political victory before. This time around the stakes are higher, and the president is by no means assured of carrying the momentum deep into an election year.
Addressing reporters before heading to Hawaii on Friday, Obama looked like a president in command of the stage again, for now. He left the capital after presiding over a two-month extension of a payroll tax cut ? about $40 per paycheck for someone making $50,000 a year ? that came when House Republicans caved on demands for a longer deal.
Yet on this issue, like many, enormous work remains for Obama after the new year, just when voters begin choosing a Republican nominee to try to oust him from his job.
Obama initially had pushed for a year-long extension of both the Social Security payroll tax cut and unemployment benefits. He got only two months on both because Congress could not agree on how to pay the bill for more without gutting their own political priorities ? the same problem that awaits all sides in the weeks to come.
Although Obama calls a full-year extension a "formality," politically, it is not. So he pushed Congress to work "without drama, without delay" when they return from their own recess.
The whole scene was reminiscent of a year ago, when Obama took a self-described "shellacking" in the midterm elections but still ended up leaving for his yearly Hawaiian holiday on a high note.
In a news conference at the time, a jubilant Obama claimed a "season of progress" after stringing together legislative victories in a lame-duck congressional session, including the repeal of the military's ban on openly gay service members and approval of a new nuclear treaty with Russia.
But progress was short-lived. Obama returned to Washington in January to face a divided Congress and a Republican party prepared to push him to the brink.
This time, Obama left without taking questions from reporters, ensuring no disruption from the narrative all over Washington ? a win for him, a capitulation for House Republicans. Had he engaged the press, Obama may well have been challenged about violence in Iraq since a U.S. troop withdrawal, or his own flip-flop over an oil pipeline included in the tax deal.
Obama may have won the messaging war this December, preventing higher taxes for 160 million Americans. But he gave up plenty to get a deal.
In securing the short-term extension, Obama caved on the controversial Keystone XL pipeline. The president had boldly said he would reject any effort to tie the payroll tax extension to the proposed Canada-to-Texas pipeline; he later gave in to GOP demands to make a decision on the project within 60 days.
Given that the House Republicans' backpedaling far overshadowed the president's compromises, GOP consultant John Feehery said Republican lawmakers are likely to come back to Washington in January even more motivated to take on the president.
"This is a temporary victory," Feehery said. "We're going to go back to the fight once again in a month and a half. This is one battle, not the whole war."
Obama's willingness to stand firm could help rally support among Democrats who have complained that the president too often seems to give in too much.
Obama's hard line at the end of the payroll tax cut talks sent an important message both to his supporters and Republicans, Democratic strategist Karen Finney said. She said both have misinterpreted Obama's prior compromises as a sign of weakness.
"In this instance it was certainly critical that the president not give any more ground," Finney said. "He showed that he does have a point at which he won't go farther."
The economy has been showing signs of coming around, too, which is vital to Obama's chances for a second term. But this is another area in which today's optimism can turn troubling at any time, with outside forces such as Europe's economic woes threatening to dampen the American recovery.
Each year, partisan debate and unfinished business have forced the president to delay departure for his cherished Christmas vacation in Hawaii. This December's stalemate threatened to derail the trip entirely, given that Obama himself pledged to stay in Washington until a deal to extend the cuts was reached.
Obama's original Dec. 17 departure date came and went.
It was only Friday, after the House and Senate finalized the deal, that the White House announced Obama's departure for later in the day.
The president has no public events planned during what is expected to be about a 10-day vacation. He typically spends his days in Hawaii playing golf or going to the beach with his family, though he makes occasional outings for dinner with friends.
The White House says the president's focus will be on spending time with his family. But there will be a small team of advisers traveling with Obama to brief him daily on domestic and international events ? and to help him get ready for the work, and the battles, that wait in January.
___
Follow Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC
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jakefinkbonner.com
From left, Jake Finkbonner in kindergarten in 2005, Jake one day after he contracted flesh-eating bacteria, and Jake on his sixth birthday just eight days after the accident.
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By James Eng, msnbc.com
Jake Finkbonner is bouncing about, teasing his sisters and playing basketball again. That is a miracle ? not only to him and his family but also to the Pope Benedict XVI.
The 11-year-old Ferndale, Wash., boy?s stunning recovery from the flesh-eating bacteria that chewed up his face and nearly killed him in 2006 has been officially deemed by the Vatican as a miracle attributable to Kateri Tekakwitha, a 17th-century American Indian woman who converted to Catholicism at a young age.
The pope on Monday signed a decree authenticating the miracle, clearing the way for Tekakwitha to be canonized as America?s first indigenous saint.
Fateful day
Jake's face-off with death started at age 5 on Feb. 11, 2006, when he fell and bumped his mouth against the base of a portable basketball hoop while playing basketball for the Boys & Girls Club. Lurking on the surface of that base was Strep A bacteria, which causes a tissue-destroying disease known as necrotizing fasciitis, a very rare condition commonly known as flesh-eating bacteria.
Within a couple of days Jake found himself in Children?s Hospital in Seattle, fighting for his life as the bacteria gnawed away incessantly at his head, neck and chest.
?They had taken him apart. There was nothing to see of Jake?s face except his nose and chin. Everything else on his head was completely covered in bandages,? Elsa Finkbonner recalled.
jakefinkbonner.com
Jake Finkbonner two months later with skin grafts.
Doctors told Elsa and her husband, Don Finkbonner, who works at a BP refinery in Ferndale, that the prognosis was grim.
?They opened up Jake and said, ?If you are praying people, you need to pray. You need to get your family here because we are trying to save his life,?? Elsa said.
A priest and family friend, Fr. Tim Sauer, was called in to administer what he thought would be last rites.
?When I was called to the hospital it was basically to help the family prepare to say goodbye and let go. His probability of survival at that point was very slender,? Sauer told mnsbc.com.
The Finkbonners are devout Catholics and Don Finkbonner is also a Lummi Indian. At the urging of Sauer, they began praying for the Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha to intercede on Jake?s behalf. Friends, neighbors, community members and strangers joined them.
After numerous surgeries to remove his damaged flesh, Jake suddenly and unexpectedly took a turn for the better on the ninth day of his hospitalization, Sauer recalls. That was the same day that a relic of Tekakwitha was brought to the hospital from the national office of the Tekakwitha Conference, a Catholic Native American religious organization, in Great Falls, Mont.
jakefinkbonner.com
Jake Finkbonner with some of his buddies in 2007. From left, Rick, Jason, Jake and Ben.
The relic was placed on a pillow next to Jake?s head. ?On that day his vital signs began to make an unaccountable improvement,? Sauer says.
Vatican investigators would later interview hospital officials about Jake?s case, and the doctors said ?they did not have any clear medical explanation for why his condition turned around on that day,? Sauer says.
About nine weeks after he was admitted to Children?s, Jake was cleared to go home.
Vatican investigates
After Jake?s recovery, Sauer sent a letter to the Seattle archbishop detailing the possible miracle.
The Vatican in Rome eventually sent a panel of investigators ? including a doctor and a church lawyer ? to Ferndale and Seattle to examine the claims. Community members were asked if they indeed did pray for the intercession of Tekakwitha. Doctors who attended to Jake were also interviewed.
The findings were forwarded to the Congregation for Causes of Saints, a committee of cardinals and bishops in Rome who review all the testimony that leads to the canonization of saints and presents the case to the pope.
On Monday, the Vatican announced that Pope Benedict XVI formally recognized the miracle attributed to Tekakwitha ? the last step on her way to canonization.
Tekakwitha, known as ?the Lily of the Mohawks,? was born in 1656 in upstate New York to a Mohawk chief and an Algonquin mother. A smallpox epidemic killed both her parents and left her with partial blindness and a disfigured face. She converted to Catholicism after meeting several priests. Ostracized from her tribal community, Tekakwitha devoted herself to a life of deep prayer. She died in 1680 at age 24.? According to the Catholic Church, witnesses said that within minutes of her death, the scars from smallpox completely vanished and her once-disfigured face suddenly shone with radiant beauty.
Pope John Paul II beatified Tekakwitha in 1980 ? the first Native American to be declared ?blessed? ? a step below sainthood.
Usually, proof of two miracles must be attributed to someone who becomes a saint -- one before beatification, one after. But Pope John Paul II waived the first miracle requirement in order to beatify Tekakwitha in 1980, according to the Albany Times Union.
It?s not known yet when and where Tekakwitha?s canonization ceremony will be held. Canonizations are usually done in Rome but there have been cases where it has taken place elsewhere, Sauer said.
Whatever the case, Jake?s family will be invited and will attend. ?Wherever it will be, we?ll be on our way,? Elsa Finkbonner says.
Sauer notes that it?s not mere coincidence the news comes on the week before Christmas. ?It?s a statement of faith that God continues to work miracles in people?s lives today and do it through simple, ordinary people like Kateri Tekakwitha and Jake Finkbonner.?
Back on the court
As for Jake, ?he?s doing fantastic,? his mother says. ?He?s an excellent student, a typical, happy 11-year-old-boy who plays video games and punches his?sister in the head and makes her cry.? He?s also playing basketball again on an AAU league.
Elsa Finkbonner
?He said, ?I?m not afraid of that infection. I beat it the first time and I can beat it again,?? Elsa said.
As for the nonbelievers, Elsa is quick to explain that attributing Jake?s miracle survival to a future saint is in no way a discredit to the doctors who treated him.
?We know Jake would not be here if those doctors were not so fabulous,? she says.
But she also notes that the doctors themselves told the Vatican interviewers they don?t know how to account for the boy?s turn of fortune.
?They stated they did everything humanly possible and that the death rate for this disease is very high. They had also made comments as to they don?t know why he survived. They, too, have stated that, yeah, it is a miracle that he has survived.?
For more on Jake's story, visit his website, jakefinkbonner.com.
Do you believe in miracles?
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UNITED NATIONS ? The U.N. Security Council voted unanimously Wednesday to extend the U.N. peacekeeping force along the Israeli-Syrian border, warning that events in the region could impact its operations.
The 15-member council renewed the mandate of the more than 1,000-strong force for six months until June 30.
The U.N. Disengagement Observer Force, known as UNDOF, was established in 1974, following the 1973 Yom Kippur war, to monitor the disengagement of Israeli and Syrian forces in the Golan Heights. Israel captured the Golan Heights from Syria in 1967, and Syria wants the land returned in exchange for peace.
The council resolution, co-sponsored by the United States and Russia, doesn't directly mention Syria's ongoing crackdown on demonstrators demanding an end to President Bashar Assad's regime. But it notes that "evolving conditions in the region could have an impact on the functioning of the force."
The resolution also expresses "grave concern" at the serious events in UNDOF's area of operations on May 15 and June 5 when Syrian demonstrators crossed into Israel and "put the long-held ceasefire in jeopardy." The incidents marked the first serious border violations in decades.
On the May 15 anniversary of Israel's birth in 1948, hundreds of Palestinians and their supporters poured across the Syrian frontier and staged riots, drawing Israeli accusations that Damascus, and its ally Iran, orchestrated the unrest to shift attention from the uprising back home. The June 5 clashes, in which Israeli forces reportedly killed 20 people and wounded scores more, marked the anniversary of the Arab defeat in the 1967 Mideast war.
In a recent report to the Security Council, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said UNDOF fortified its positions after these events "to ensure that the force has the operational capability to mitigate risks in the future." He added without elaborating that UNDOF has also done contingency planning "for various scenarios relating to the operational environment."
The Security Council echoed the secretary-general in noting "with concern that the situation in the Middle East is tense and is likely to remain so, unless and until a comprehensive settlement covering all aspects of the Middle East problem can be reached."
Ban urged all parties to resume negotiations as soon as possible on a comprehensive Mideast peace agreement, which would involve Israel, the Palestinians, Syria, Lebanon and the broader Arab world.
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By Sean FallonNerd Approved? If there's one thing that I miss about living in an area that sees snowy, wintry weather, it's making snowmen. I mean, it just doesn't feel right to make a snowman out of dirt while wearing shorts.
Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/45675820#45675820
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