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Unless President Obama and Congress agree otherwise, $85 billion in across-the-board budget cuts are supposed to go into effect Friday. But debate over the so-called sequester - and just how draconian it might be - is confusing.

Unless President Obama and Congress agree otherwise, $85 billion in across-the-board budget cuts are supposed to go into effect Friday. But debate over the so-called sequester - and just how draconian it might be - is confusing.

For a brief history that seems pretty evenhanded, check out "The Confused Person's Guide to Sequester Politics" by political reporter David Wiegel at Slate.com. Wiegel traces the debate to its beginnings in the awful budget standoff during the summer of 2011, which was followed by the "fiscal cliff" and, now, another frustrating "manufactured" Washington crisis.

http://slate.me/YhifOV

Unemployment checks would be whacked by 9.4 percent, roofs blown off by Hurricane Sandy won't get repaired, and "Granny won't get her lunch," according to this report at CNNMoney. And those are just three of the "7 spending cuts you'll really feel," CNN says.

http://cnnmon.ie/15AWAXa

Wildfires, workplace deaths, homelessness and more terrorism are among the risks posed by the cuts, says this breathless ABCNews report that ups the ante on CNN with its title, "57 terrible consequences of the sequester." The list draws on reports from the heads of 20 federal agencies to the Senate Appropriations committee.

http://abcn.ws/XQyC2M

Hold on a minute. In this Breakout video on Yahoo Finance, Michael Pento of Pento Portfolio Strategies says, "If you listen to some of these politicians, the Mayans were just a couple of months off, you know, the world will indeed end once we cut some spending." Echoing congressional Republicans, Pento says the cuts in the sequester represent "nothing" in a federal budget with $3.6 trillion in spending this year.

http://yhoo.it/YHUPSJ

In an attempt to separate fact from fiction in the sequester debate, PolitiFact.com last week posted this analysis of a statement Tuesday by President Obama - who said the cuts will have to be made without distinguishing between "some bloated program . . . or a vital service." PolitiFact found the statement "mostly true," but said, "Obama oversimplified by glossing over the tools federal managers can use with their own discretion to make cuts."

http://bit.ly/Wf8LlD

The public, until now, hasn't been too worried, or interested, in the sequester. That could change in the days ahead as politicians rev up. The Pew Research Center released survey results last week that say almost half of the public thinks the president and Congress will, again, kick the can this week by delaying the automatic cuts, if they don't reach a deal. And, if there is no deal, 49 percent of the public will blame the Republicans.

http://bit.ly/VTQwb0