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Page 1: Presidential Weekly Address Assessment II IV MMXII a.a, A.b, A.c, B, C, D

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The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

For Immediate ReleaseFebruary 04, 2012

WEEKLY ADDRESS: It’s Time for Congress

to Act to Help Responsible Homeowners

WASHINGTON, DC — In this week’s address, President Obama continued his call for a return to

American values, including fairness and equality, as part of his blueprint for an economy built tolast. This is why the President is sending Congress his plan to give responsible homeowners thechance to save thousands of dollars on their mortgages by refinancing at historically low rateswithout adding a cent to the deficit. The housing crisis has been the single largest drag on therecovery, and although the Administration’s actions have helped responsible homeowners

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refinance their mortgages and stay in their homes, Congress must act now to do more to continueassisting homeowners and the economy. President Obama asks all Americans to tell theirelected officials to pass this plan to keep more families in their homes and more neighborhoodsthriving and whole.

Remarks of President Barack ObamaWeekly Address

The White House

Saturday, February 4, 2012 

Over the last couple of weeks, I’ve been traveling around the country and talking with folksabout my blueprint for an economy built to last. It’s a blueprint that focuses on restoring the

things we’ve always done best. Our strengths. American manufacturing. Americanenergy. The skills and education of American workers.

And most importantly, American values like fairness and responsibility.

We know what happened when we strayed from those values over the past decade – especiallywhen it comes to our housing market.

Lenders sold loans to families who couldn’t afford them. Banks packaged those mortgages upand traded them for phony profits. It drove up prices and created an unsustainable bubble thatburst – and left millions of families who did everything right in a world of hurt.

It was wrong. The housing crisis has been the single biggest drag on our recovery from therecession. It has kept millions of families in debt and unable to spend, and it has left hundreds of thousands of construction workers out of a job.

But there’s something even more important at stake.  I’ve been saying this is a make-or-break moment for the middle class. And the housing crisis struck right at the heart of what it means tobe middle-class in this country: owning a home. Raising our kids. Building our dreams.

Right now, there are more than 10 million homeowners in this country who, because of a declinein home prices that is no fault of their own, owe more on their mortgages than their homes areworth. Now, it is wrong for anyone to suggest that the only option for struggling, responsiblehomeowners is to sit and wait for the housing market to hit bottom. I don’t accept that. None of us should.

That’s why we launched a plan a couple years ago that’s helped nearly one million responsiblehomeowners refinance their mortgages and save an average of $300 on their payments eachmonth.  Now, I’ll be the first to admit it didn’t help as many folks as we’d hoped. But thatdoesn’t mean we shouldn’t keep trying. 

That’s why I’m sending Congress a plan that will give every responsible homeowner the chanceto save about $3,000 a year on their mortgages by refinancing at historically low rates. No more

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red tape. No more endless forms. And a small fee on the largest financial institutions will makesure it doesn’t add a dime to the deficit. 

I want to be clear: this plan will not help folks who bought a house they couldn’t afford and then

walked away from it. It won’t help folks who bought multiple houses just to turn around and sell

them.

What this plan will do is help millions of responsible homeowners who make their paymentsevery month, but who, until now, couldn’t refinance because their home values kept dropping or they got wrapped up in too much red tape.

But here’s the catch. In order to lower mortgage payments for millions of Americans, we needCongress to act. They’re the ones who have to pass this plan. And as anyone who has followedthe news in the last six months can tell you, getting Congress to do anything these days is not aneasy job.

That’s why I’m going to keep up the pressure on Congress to do the right thing. But I also needyour help. I need your voice. I need everyone who agrees with this plan to get on the phone,send an email, tweet, pay a visit, and remind your representatives in Washington who they work for. Tell them to pass this plan. Tell them to help more families keep their homes, and moreneighborhoods stay vibrant and whole.

The truth is, it will take time for our housing market to recover. It will take time for oureconomy to fully bounce back. But there are steps we can take, right now, to move this countryforward. That’s what I promise to do as your President, and I hope Members of Congress will

 join me.

Thank you, and have a great weekend.

[PRESIDENTIAL WEEKLY ADDRESS ASSESSMENT PHASE A.a START OF]

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

For Immediate Release February 04, 2012

1the \before consonants usu thə, before vowels usu thē, sometime before vowels

also thə; for emphasis before titles and names or to suggest uniqueness often 'thē\

definite article [ME, fr. OE thē, masc. demonstrative pron. & definite article, alter.

(influenced by oblique cases — as thæs, gen. — & neut., thæt ) of sē; akin to Gk ho, 

masc. demonstrative pron. & definite article — more at that] (bef. 12c)

1 a — used as a function word to indicate that a following noun or noun equivalent is

definite or has been previously specified by context or by circumstance ‹put ~ cat

out› b — used as a function word to indicate that a following noun or noun

equivalent is a unique or a particular member of its class ‹~ President› ‹~ Lord› c — 

used as a function word before nouns that designate natural phenomena or points of 

the compass ‹~ night is cold› d — used as a function word before a noun denoting

time to indicate reference to what is resent or immediate or is under consideration

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WEEKLY ADDRESS: It’s Time for Congress

to Act to Help Responsible Homeowners

WASHINGTON, DC — In this week’s address, President Obama continued his call for a returnto American values, including fairness and equality, as part of his blueprint for an economybuilt to last.

[ Old English wice < Germanic, "series,succession"]

[ Old English tīma "period of time" < Germanic,"extend"]

re·spon·si·ble \ri-'spän(t)-sə-bəl\ adj [AF responsable, fr. respuns] (1643)

1 a : liable to be called on to answer b (1): liable to be called to account as

the primary cause, motive, or agent ‹a committee ~ for the job› (2): being

the cause or explanation ‹mechanical defects were ~ for the accident› c :

liable to legal review or in case of fault to penalties

2 a : able to answer for one's conduct and obligations : trustworthy b : able

to choose for oneself between right and wrong

[13th century. Via French contenir < Latin continere "hold together" < tenere "to hold"]

week \'wēk\ n [ME weke, fr. OE wicu, wucu; 

akin to OHG wehha week and perh. to L vicis 

change, alternation, OHG wehsal exchange]

(bef. 12c)

1 a : any of a series of 7-day cycles used in

various calendars ; esp: a 7-day cycle beginning

on Sunday and ending on Saturday b (1): a

week beginning with a specified day or

containing a specified holiday ‹Easter ~› ‹the ~

of the 18th› (2): a week appointed for public

recognition of some cause ‹Fire Prevention

Week ›

2 a : any seven consecutive days b : a series of 

fair·ness [férnəss] noun 1. quality of being fair: the condition of being just or impartial

2. beauty: the condition of being pleasing to look at

in (all) fairness so as to be just and impartialIn all fairness, I don't see how this is important. 

1Amer·i·can \ə-'mer-ə-kən, -'mər-, -'me-rə-\

n (1568)

1 : an American Indian of No. America or So.

America

2 : a native or inhabitant of No. America orSo. America

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This is why the President is sending Congress his plan to give responsible homeowners thechance to save thousands of dollars on their mortgages by refinancing at historically low rateswithout adding a cent to the deficit.

The housing crisis has been the single largest drag on the recovery, and although theAdministration’s actions have helped responsible homeowners refinance their mortgages andstay in their homes, Congress must act now to do more to continue assisting homeowners and

the economy.

[14th century. Via French < Latin praesident- < presentparticiple of praesidere (see preside)]

[14th century. < French < finer "to end, settle" < Latinfinis "end"]

[14th century. < Latin addere < dare "give"]

without n (15c) : an outer place or area ‹came from ~› cri·sis \'krī -səs\ n, pl cri·ses \'krī -"sēz\ [ME, fr. L, fr. Gk krisis, lit.,

decision, fr. krinein to decide — more at certain] (15c)

1 a : the turning point for better or worse in an acute disease or

fever b : a paroxysmal attack of pain, distress, or disorderedfunction c : an emotionally significant event or radical change of 

status in a person's life ‹a midlife ~›

2 : the decisive moment (as in a literary plot)

3 a : an unstable or crucial time or state of affairs in which a

[14th century. Directly or via French acte < Latinactus, actum "public transaction" < past participle of  agere "do"]

[ Old English hām < Germanic]

[15th century. Directly or via French < Latin oeconomia <Greek oikonomia < oikonomos "steward of a household" < oikos "house" + nemein "manage"]

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President Obama asks all Americans to tell their elected officials to pass this plan to keep morefamilies in their homes and more neighborhoods thriving and whole.

Remarks of President Barack ObamaWeekly Address

The White House

Saturday, February 4, 2012 

Οικονομία < since 5th century Before the Appearance of the personality called

Jesus Christ. < means to manage city state food, cloth & cleaning limits.

[ Old English āscian < Indo-European, "to wish"]

[Late 17th century. < French, "ground plan," alteration (after   plan "flat") of plant < Latin plantare (see plant)]

[15th century. < Latin familia "servants of a household,household, family" < famulus "servant"]

[Late 16th century. < French remarquer < marquer "to mark"]

[ Old English mearc "boundary, marker" < Indo-European, "boundary"]

[14th century. < Latin directus, past participle of  dirigere "set straight, guide"]

[ Old English hūs < Germanic]

Sat·ur·day \'sa-tər-(")dā, -dē \ n [ME saterday, fr. OEsæterndæg (akin to OFris  sāterdei), fr. L Saturnus Saturn + OE dæg day] (bef. 12c) : the seventh day of the week  — Sat·ur·days \-dēz, -(")dāz \ adv 

When couple refers to two partners or married people, it may be treated as s ingular or

plural, depending on whether the couple acts as a single unit or as two separate people

within the relationship: The couple wants to be married before the end of the year. The

couple have not reconciled, and continue to live apart. However, if a pronoun refers to

couple, it is almost always plural (they, them, their ), and so the verb should be plural as

well: The couple have [not has] repeatedly asked that their privacy be respected. In other

uses, couple is often followed by of and a plural noun, in which case it is treated as plural: A

couple of books were on the table. In informal uses the strict sense of "two" may be

expanded to "several." The use of couple without of in such contexts (I bought a couple

CDs.) is increasingly heard but should be avoided in formal writing.

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Over the last couple of weeks, I’ve been traveling around the country and talking with folksabout my blueprint for an economy built to last.

It’s a blueprint that focuses on restoring the things we’ve always done best. Our

strengths. American manufacturing. American energy. The skills and education of Americanworkers.

blue·print

noun ( plural  blue·prints)1. print of plan: a photographic print of a technical drawing with white lines printed

on a blue background, or a simi larly produced print with blue lines on a white

background, usually of an architectural or engineering design

2. plan or guide: a plan of action or a guide to doing something

His administration's policies became a blueprint for those that followed. 

transitive verb ( past and past participle blue·print·ed, present 

articiple blue·print·ing, 3rd person present singular  blue·prints)1. make print of something: to make a blueprint of something, especially a

technical drawing

German Foundations In Crosshairs Abroad 

The foundations affiliated with Germany's major political parties are playing

important role in the upheavals in the Middle East, attracting the attention o

the region's rulers -- and making them the targets of harassment. The

organizations' troubles are by no means limited to Egypt, where the offices

one German organization were recently searched.

Links 4 Links 4 Links playing a game unseen to common man who wonders

(s)he should be happy at all...

If you know what really matters then that is all you need to know...The Rest is Information Online doomed to follow the WaterFlow all the way

the 1010 sink called 'Global Humanity's Oblivion'...  

Forgiveness is everything when there is room left

to surrender thoughts in safe ground...

A Memoria to remember , A Glory sinful to

Forget...

A Grandeur Lost but not Forgotten to be Retaken

n Time when needed be...

Have you ever met your destiny denied by

everyone but your own shameless self?

A Premature U.S. Withdrawal From Iraq

may cause an irreversible instability in the

Region… im·por·tant \im-'pȯr-tənt, esp Southern & NewEng -tənt, -dənt\ adj [ME

importante, fr. ML important-, importans, prp. of importare to signify — 

more at import] (15c)

1 : marked by or indicative of significant worth or consequence : valuable

in content or relationship2 obs: importunate urgent 

3 : ivin evidence of a feelin of self-im ortance usa e see im ortantl  

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And most importantly, American values like fairness and responsibility.

We know what happened when we strayed from those values over the past decade – especiallywhen it comes to our housing market.

Lenders sold loans to families who couldn’t afford them.

Banks packaged those mortgages up and traded them for phony profits. It drove up prices andcreated an unsustainable bubble that burst – and left millions of families who did everything right in a world of hurt.

2know n (1592) : knowledge 

— in the know : in possession of exclusive knowledge or

information ; broadly : well-informed 

[13th century. Past participle of pass]come [kum] 

( past  came [kaym], past participle come, present 

articiple com·ing, 3rd person present singular  

comes) CORE MEANING: a basic intransitive verb

expressing movement toward a specified place or

person.

This verb often expresses the concept of movement

coupled with the arrival at a place where an activity

will take place.

Come and sit by me. Come to my house tomorrow. 

1. intransitive verb 

occur in mind: to occur as a thought in the mind

 An afterthought came to me while I was shaving.  

[15th century. < Latin familia "servants of ahousehold, household, family" < famulus "servant"]

[ Old English geforþian "accomplish" < forþia"to further"]

[14th century. < Old French < mort "dead"+ gage "pledge," because property pledgedas security may be lost]

ev·ery·thing \'ev-rē-"thiŋ\ pron (14c)

1 a : all that exists b : all that relates to the subjec

2 : all that is important ‹you mean ~ to me›

3 : all sorts of other things — used to indicate

related but unspecified events, facts, or condition

‹ ~ — ›

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It was wrong. The housing crisis has been the single biggest drag on our recovery from therecession. It has kept millions of families in debt and unable to spend, and it has left hundredsof thousands of construction workers out of a job.

But there’s something even more important at stake. I’ve been saying this is a make-or-break moment for the middle class. And the housing crisis struck right at the heart of what it means tobe middle-class in this country: owning a home. Raising our kids. Building our dreams.

[12th century. < Old French hurter "ram, collide,"probably < Germanic]

[13th century. Via French < Latin singulus < simplus "simple"]

4home vb, homed hom·ing 

vi (1765)

1 : to go or return home

2 of an animal : to return accurately to one's home or natal area from a

distance

3 : to proceed to or toward a source of radiated energy used as a

guide ‹missiles ~ in on radar›

4 : to proceed or direct attention toward an objective ‹science is

homing in on the mysterious human process —Sam Glucksberg›

vt : to send to or provide with a home

[14th century. Via French < Latdispensare < dispendere "weighout" < pendere "weigh"]

[15th century. < Latin construct-, past participle of  construere "pile together" < struere "pile, build"]

have something to do with somebody or  something to be connected with or involve somebody or somethingsomething else somebody or something really special,remarkable, or extreme (informal )

That performance was something else! 

[ Old English hām < Germanic]1coun·try \'kən-trē\ n, pl countries [ME contree, fr. AF

cuntree, contré, fr. ML contrata, fr. L contra against, on the

opposite side] (13c)

1 : an indefinite usu. extended expanse of land : region 

‹miles of open ~›

2 a : the land of a person's birth, residence, or citizenship

b : a political state or nation or its territory

3 a : the people of a state or district : populace b :  jury c :

electorate 2 

4 : rural as distinguished from urban areas ‹prefers the ~ to

the city›

5 : country music 

— coun·try·ish \-trē-ish\ adj  

3home adj (1552)

1 : of, relating to, or being a home, place of orig

or base of operations ‹~ office›

2 : prepared, done, or designed for use in a hom

‹~ remedies› ‹~ cooking› ‹a ~ videotape system

3 : operating or occurring in a home area ‹the ~

team› ‹~ games› 

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Right now, there are more than 10 million homeowners in this country who, because of a

decline in home prices that is no fault of their own, owe more on their mortgages than theirhomes are worth.

Now, it is wrong for anyone to suggest that the only option for struggling, responsiblehomeowners is to sit and wait for the housing market to hit bottom. I don’t accept that. None of us should.

That’s why we launched a plan a couple years ago that’s helped nearly one million responsible

homeowners refinance their mortgages and save an average of $300 on their payments eachmonth.

[13th century. Via Old French faut(e) "lack" <assumed Vulgar Latin fallitum "failing" < Latin fallere "fail"]

4worth prep (13c)

1 a : equal in value to b : having assets or

income equal to

2 : deserving of ‹well ~ the effort›

— worth one's salt : of substantial or significant

value or merit

option vt (1926)

1 : to grant or take an option on

2 : to acquire the exclusive right to use (

author's work) as the basis for a motion

picture ‹the studio ~ed  the novel for a fi

bottom adj (1561)

1 : of, relating to, or situated at the bottom ‹~ rock›

2 : frequenting the bottom ‹~ fish› 

I should used to advise somebody to do

omething

I should take him up on his offer, if I 

year \'yir\ n [ME yere, fr. OE gēar; akin to OHG  jār year,

Gk hōros year, hōra season, hour] (bef. 12c)

1 a : the period of about 3651/4 solar days required for

one revolution of the earth around the sun b : the time

required for the apparent sun to return to an arbitrary

fixed or moving reference point in the sky c : the time in

which a planet completes a revolution about the sun

‹two Mercury ~s›

2 a : a cycle in the Gregorian calendar of 365 or 366 days

divided into 12 months beginning with January and

ending with December b : a period of time equal to one

year of the Gregorian calendar but beginning at a

different time

Χορός < Χώρα , Χώρος < Χόρτος 

(Περιφραγμενος Χώρος = Sealed Space) <

IndoEuropean gher- to hold , to contain.

get new financing: to obtain new financing for something on differentterms, often involving the paying off of an existing high-interest loan by

means of a new lower-interest one

[ Old English manig < Indo-European, "many, often"]

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 Now, I’ll be the first to admit it didn’t help as many folks as we’d hoped.  But that doesn’t meanwe shouldn’t keep trying.

That’s why I’m sending Congress a plan that will give every responsible homeowner the chanceto save about $3,000 a year on their mortgages by refinancing at historically low rates.

No more red tape. No more endless forms. And a small fee on the largest financial institutionswill make sure it doesn’t add a dime to the deficit.

[ Old English cēpan "take, observe," origin ?]

re·spon·si·ble \ri-'spän(t)-sə-bəl\ adj [AF responsable, fr. respuns] (1643)

1 a : liable to be called on to answer b (1): liable to be called to account as the primary cause, motive, or agent ‹a committee ~ for

 job› (2): being the cause or explanation ‹mechanical defects were ~ for the accident› c : liable to legal review or in case of fault to

penalties

2 a : able to answer for one's conduct and obligations : trustworthy b : able to choose for oneself between right and wrong

3 : marked by or involving responsibility or accountability ‹~ financial policies› ‹a ~ job›

4 : politically answerable ; esp: required to submit to the electorate if defeated by the legislature — used esp. of the British cabine

— re·spon·si·ble·ness n 

— re·spon·si·bly \-blē\ adv  

syn RESPONSIBLE ANSWERABLE ACCOUNTABLE AMENABLE LIABLE mean subject to being held to account. RESPONSIBLE implies holding a specific o

duty, or trust ‹the bureau responsible for revenue collection›. ANSWERABLE suggests a relation between one having a moral or legal

obligation and a court or other authority charged with oversight of its observance ‹an intelligence agency answerable to Congress›

low \'lō\ vi [ME loowen, fr. OE hlōwan; akin to

OHG hluoen to moo, L calare to call, summon,

Gk kalein] (bef. 12c) : moo 

[ Old English, < Indo-European]

[ Old English tæppe "narrow strip of cloth," origin ?] 

[ Old English smæl "slender, small"

< Germanic, "small animal"] 

[12th century. Via French

< Latin larga, form of  

largus "abundant"] 

add \'ad\ vb [ME, fr. L addere, fr. ad- + -dere to put — more at do] 

vt (14c)

1 : to join or unite so as to bring about an increase or improvement ‹~s 60

acres to his land› ‹wine ~s a creative touch to cooking›

2 : to say further : append 

3 : to combine (numbers) into an equivalent simple quantity or number

4 : to include as a member of a group ‹don't forget to ~ me in›

vi  

1 a : to perform addition b : to come together or unite by addition

2 a : to serve as an addition ‹the movie will ~ to his fame› b : to make an

addition ‹~ed  to her savings›

— add·able or add·ible \'a-də-bəl\ adj  

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I want to be clear: this plan will not help folks who bought a house they couldn’t afford and then

walked away from it. It won’t help folks who bought multiple houses just to turn around andsell them.

What this plan will do is help millions of responsible homeowners who make their paymentsevery month, but who, until now, couldn’t refinance because their home values kept dropping orthey got wrapped up in too much red tape.

[13th century. Via Old French cler < Latin clarus "clear, bright"] 

[ Old English bycgan < Germanic]help n (bef. 12c)

1 : aid assistance 

2 : a source of aid ‹printed ~s to the memory —C. S. Braden›

3 : remedy relief  ‹there was no ~ for it›

4 a : one who serves or assists another (as in housework) :

helper b : employee ‹~ wanted› — often used collectively

‹the hired ~› 

[14th century. Via French < obsolete Italian

millione "great thousand" < Latin mille 

"thousand"] 

be·cause \bi-'kȯz, -'kəz, -'kȯs, bē-\ conj [ME because that,

because, fr. by cause that ] (14c)

1 : for the reason that : since ‹rested ~ he was tired›

2 : the fact that : that ‹the reason I haven't been fired is ~ my

boss hasn't got round to it yet —E. B. White› 

pollo 18 was added in the Wargames /

lder based on so called leaked top

cret information about Cancelled NASA

ograms.

e have been to the moon again but we

on’t really let you know why we’ve been

ere again (and again and again).

nd Truth beyond the Fear Factor.

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But here’s the catch. In order to lower mortgage payments for millions of Americans, we need

Congress toact

.

They’re the ones who have to pass this plan. And as anyone who has followed the news in thelast six months can tell you, getting Congress to do anything these days is not an easy job.

Incedent 

in·de·cent

adjective 

1.

offending public moral standards: unacceptable and

offensive to accepted standards, especially in sexual

matters 

2.

improper: inappropriate under thecircumstances and disapproved of by

others

The funeral was arranged with indecen

haste. 

[14th century. < Latin moralis < mor-, stem of mos "custom," in plural "morals"]

local customs should be respected as long as those who protect tradition know what progress is...  

[15th century. < Latin progressus, past participle of progredi "go forward" < gradi "to walk"]

When Tradition stops Time in the name of Sacredness, Progress exists no more...

The Sand Becomes nothing more than Mud swallowing people in what once was their home...

In Times of War, When Time Stands Still Man becomes a Fanatic grabbing with Teeth, Hands, Feet, Toes an

Blood whatever he or she can...

In a World Full of Sand, More Blood means more Red Mud...

And that is what Egypt is in Sahara's North Eastern Swamp...

[14th century. Directly or via French acte < Latin actus, actum "public transaction" < past participle of agere "do"]

3pass n [1pass] (1523)

1 : realization ‹brought his dream to ~›

2 : the act or an instance of passing : passage 

3 : a usu. distressing or bad state of affairs ‹what has brought

you to such a ~?›

4 a

 :

a written permission to move about freely in a place or

to leave or enter it b : a written leave of absence from a

an·y·thing [énnee thìng] ronoun 

something unspecified or unknown: any object, event, action, situation, or fact

Is there anything I need to know?  

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That’s why I’m going to keep up the pressure on Congress to do the right thing. But I also needyour help. I need your voice. I need everyone who agrees with this plan to get on the phone,send an email, tweet, pay a visit, and remind your representatives in Washington who they work for. Tell them to pass this plan. Tell them to help more families keep their homes, and more

neighborhoods stay vibrant and whole.

The truth is, it will take time for our housing market to recover. It will take time for oureconomy to fully bounce back. But there are steps we can take, right now, to move this countryforward. That’s what I promise to do as your President, and I hope Members of Congress will join me.

[14th century. < Latin pressura < press- (see press1)]

3whole adv (14c)

1 : wholly entirely ‹a ~ new age group —Henry Chauncey›

2 : as a complete entity

[Pre-12th century. Via Old French dialect < Latinmercat-, past participle of mercari "buy" < merx  "goods"]

1hope \'hōp\ vb, hoped hop·ing [ME, fr. OE hopian; akin to MHG hoffen to hope]

vi (bef. 12c)

1 : to cherish a desire with anticipation ‹~s for a promotion›

2 archaic: trust 

1week·end \'wēk-"end\ n (1638) : the end of the week ;

specif : the period between the close of one working or

business or school week and the beginning of the next

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Thank you, and have a great weekend.

[PRESIDENTIAL WEEKLY ADDRESS ASSESSMENT PHASE A.a END OF]