Ditto what others have said. I love photography and have a Canon Rebel (XSi).
I bought my Rebel in 2008 and still use it on a regular basis. It's never failed me (knock on wood) and the only thing I really wish for is a higher ISO (but most of the time that's just at Disney on dark rides

). Over the years I've spent thousands on lenses though- previous posters were right when they said to invest here. Also when it comes to "good glass" you're not going to find many deals unless you go used or wait for Canon rebates.
You can't go wrong with an entry level Canon (Rebel series) or Nikon. Like someone said- go to a store (
best buy, a legit camera store, etc) and hold them in your hand. The wholesale retailers have some good deals, as well as
amazon and the main camera sites- B&H (bhphotovideo.com) and Adorama. I buy my camera equipment from B&H almost exclusively.
The best advice I received was to just go with the kit lens and as your skills improve, then buy extra lenses because you'll have more knowledge and learn your preferences. I am glad I didn't buy those bundles they have out there (usually comes with an 18-55mm kit lens and the 75-300mm zoom). I would have never used the 75-300mm because I quickly wanted better quality glass. I borrowed a friend's and hated it.
As for the argument with a dSLR vs point and shoot... yes you can take great pictures with both (I've proven this myself) but if you really want to hone your skills and go from great pictures to amazing pictures- you aren't going to go with a P&S. You just have to decide what you want. You can get some great pictures with a superzoom as well if you want a little more than a regular P&S but not invest in lenses (Canon SX40HC for example). For me photography was a slippery slope! I thought I'd be happy with 1 or 2 lenses... that's somehow grown to 7 and I can list off two other's I'd like (both over $1K each)
