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| the Grey ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Tournaments Won: 7 Join Date: Sep 2006
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| Obama flip-flops on pot 1/31/08|The Washington Times| by Jen Haberkorn Barack Obama, the senatorial candidate of 2004, might have a bone to pick with Barack Obama, the presidential candidate of 2008. Videotapes of debates and speeches that were obtained by The Washington Times show Mr. Obama took positions during his Senate campaign on nearly a half dozen issues, ranging from the Cuba embargo to health care for illegal immigrants, that conflict with statements he has made during his run for the White House. For instance, in MSNBC's Oct. 30 presidential debate, Mr. Obama hesitantly raised his hand and joined with most of his Democratic rivals to declare that he opposed decriminalizing marijuana. But as a U.S. Senate candidate, Mr. Obama told Illinois college students in January 2004 that he supported eliminating criminal penalties for marijuana use or possession, a debate video shows. "I think we need to rethink and decriminalize our marijuana laws," Mr. Obama said during a debate at Northwestern University. "But I'm not somebody who believes in legalization of marijuana." When confronted with the statements on the video, Obama's campaign offered two explanations to the Times in less than 24 hours. At first, Obama spokesman Tommy Vietor said that the candidate had "always" supported decriminalizing marijuana, suggesting his 2004 statement was correct. Then after the Times posted copies of the video on its Web site today, his campaign reversed course and declared he does not support eliminating criminal penalties for marijuana possession and use. "If you're convicted of a crime, you should be punished, but that we are sending far too many first-time, non-violent drug users to prison for very long periods of time, and that we should rethink those laws," Vietor said. The spokesman blamed confusion over the meaning of decriminalization for the conflicting answers. Obama's chief rival in the Democratic primary, Sen. Hillary Clinton, does not support decriminalizing marijuana. Neither does Sen. John McCain nor former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney on the GOP side. Rep. Ron Paul, a Texas Republican, does. Mr. Obama's differing answers on marijuana are among five conflicts between positions he took while running for Senate in 2004 and those he now articulates while running for president, a review of debate tapes shows. Experts said the likely reason for the changes was that Obama ran as a liberal during his Senate run but has become more centrist as he pursues the broad coalition required to win the White House. "This is mostly evolutionary thinking," said John Jackson, a visiting professor of political science at the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at Southern Illinois University who has written extensively on Mr. Obama's 2004 campaign. "It's not a clear 'flip-flop' kind of change, but inevitably, when someone is running for a different position, four years later, there is likely to be some change or some emphasis that gets placed differently." The position changes include: In a 2003 forum on health care, Mr. Obama said he supported the children of illegal immigrants receiving the same benefits as citizens, "whether it's medical, whether it's in-state tuition." Asked specifically if he included "undocumented" people, Mr. Obama replied, "Absolutely." But in a CNN debate Jan. 21, when Mr. Obama was asked if his health care proposal covers illegal immigrants, he said "no" and that he first wants to cover the U.S. citizens without health care. "Senator Obama has always said that single-payer universal care is a good idea because it would increase efficiency in the system, but the problem is that it's not achievable," Mr. Vietor said. In a 2004 video, Mr. Obama told an audience at Southern Illinois University, "I think it's time for us to end the embargo with Cuba "It's time for us to acknowledge that that particular policy has failed." However, he stopped short of calling for an end to the embargo in a Miami Herald op-ed in August. He said he would rely on diplomacy, with a message that if a post-Castro government made democratic changes, the U.S. "is prepared to take steps to normalize relations and ease the embargo." "Senator Obama has consistently said that U.S. policy toward Cuba has failed," Mr. Vietor said. In an October 2003 NAACP debate, Mr. Obama said he would "vote to abolish" mandatory minimum sentences. "The mandatory minimums take too much discretion away from judges," he said. Mr. Obama now says on his Web site that he would "immediately review sentences to see where we can be smarter on crime and reduce the ineffective warehousing of non-violent drug offenders." When shown transcripts of the videos, Mr. Vietor said: "The American people want a president who is going to be honest with them and talk about how we can tackle the challenges we face." The Times obtained the video footage of the public debates from a variety of sources, ranging from open sources such as YouTube to political operatives who oppose Mr. Obama's presidential campaign or his Senate bid in Illinois. Mrs. Clinton's campaign, for instance, recently released footage on its Web site of a 2004 speech in which Mr. Obama spoke about universal health care, accusing him of a flip-flop. |
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| CannaSacrament Minister Join Date: Jun 2001
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| One thing Bush taught me that I should have known all along is that presidential candidates say a lot of things that they don't mean to get into the office, once there, the things they said to get them there get forgotten or outright changed. Bush stated that he would leave the medical marijuana issue to the states, and we have seen in California just how much he meant that... Anyone who desires the office of president should automatically be disqualified from the position.
__________________ Brother Logos The more I learn, the less I know. | Truth doesn't change, only our perception of it does. THC Ministry | The Aquarian Gospel of Jesus the Christ | The Reluctant Messenger of Science and Religion True religion is real living, living with all one's soul, with all ones goodness and righteousness. --Albert Einstein |
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| Buddhist Curmudgeon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Aug 2004
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| I've been saying that for years. Instead of a popularity contest biased by which candidate has the most money to spend, wouldn't it be wonderful if we could pick our president from a list of those best qualified to do the job?
__________________ 60% of the people of America now say we are heading toward a depression. Not a recession, a depression. We are in desperate need of profitable industries that we can tax. Um... Now can we legalize pot? ~ Bill Maher |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Buzzby For This Useful Post: | Logos (02-02-2008) |
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| CannaSacrament Minister Join Date: Jun 2001
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| Natural leaders should rise to the top for sure, and there are a lot of individuals who could probably do a great job at it. Problem is that the whole system is designed in such a way that most either wouldn't want the job, or couldn't afford to apply for it. Maybe public service should be a requirement just like jury duty, every ten years or so you do a year of public service, at 10 you are a gofer, at 20 you are an aide, at 30 you might get some actual authority, 40 and beyond, the job you get depends upon your leadership abilities and past achievements. The heads of state would be 60 or older, and by then the cream would have naturally risen to the top, and we could elect Buzzby president... No fame, no fortune, just pure public servitude...I'm sure that it wouldn't work for some reason, but it's a thought I have carried around a long time, I figured it was time to share it with someone... There have to be lots of ideas that would serve us better than our current system of only rich and power hungry options... |
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