cannabisnews.com: Barack Doesn't Blow It










  Barack Doesn't Blow It

Posted by CN Staff on March 29, 2007 at 15:12:10 PT
By Andrew Bruss 
Source: Berkeley Beacon 

USA -- Ever since the nation was bitten by the 2008 presidential election bug-roughly one day after the 2006 midterm elections, it feels like-each one of the potential future leaders has been scrutinized over past indiscretions.One such tidbit to emerge was admission by Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) to a history of not only marijuana use, but also cocaine use.
Plenty of Americans, still under the illusion that the War on Drugs is a noble fight that can be won, might feel a candidate who has used such a serious substance is not fit to hold our nation's highest office.This is sheer silliness. In fact, Obama's handling of the issue suggests just the opposite.Looking back at the historical role that "the drug question" has played in presidential campaigns, Obama's honesty about his experimentation suggests he may be exactly what the country needs.When Bill Clinton was asked on MTV during his 1992 campaign if he had ever smoked pot, he replied that he had used the substance but "didn't inhale."For anyone who has ever taken a toke, Clinton's laughable answer was rightly seen as an example of a man who knows how to weasel his way out of tough questions. Years later, when Clinton was facing impeachment, he once again displayed his masterful skills of weaseldom by having his questioner define the word "is" while under oath. Yet again, when Slick Willy found himself between a rock and a hard place, he smooth-talked his way out of it in a fashion many feel characterized his presidency. Clinton wasn't the only presidential candidate whose handling of the drug question gave the American electorate a clear view into the style they would govern with. During the 2000 race, when George W. Bush was repeatedly questioned about his alleged past cocaine use, he dodged the question like it was the Vietnam draft. With the 2000 election mere days away, it was revealed the future president was once arrested for drunk driving during the height of his alcoholism. Although he has spoken about his prior love of the drink, the other substances were not something Bush talked about in public.When it comes to this and other touchy subjects, like torture, unconstitutional wiretapping, faulty intelligence and the exposure of a CIA operative, Dubya has consistently given the impression he'd simply rather not talk about it.If only we had given the drug question a little more thought.As our next presidential election draws closer with each passing broadcast of "Hardball," the question of Obama's potential as a quality president can be previewed by the way he handles the current onslaught of questions regarding his drug history.In his book "Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance," Obama talks about his past in an honest and comfortable way.Openness and transparency: these are things that have been missing from the executive branch for too long now.After what will have been eight long, frustrating and destructive years of neoconservative governance, many political spectators are already suggesting that Barack Obama's "RFK meets the American dream" image will strike a real chord.Whether it does or not remains to be seen, but Obama should at least take comfort in the fact that he remained honest in the face of at least one difficult question.Barack doesn't blow it. Source: Berkeley Beacon (CA)Author: Andrew BrussPublished: March 29, 2007Copyright: 2007 The Berkeley BeaconContact: http://tinyurl.com/2kwgxuWebsite: http://www.berkeleybeacon.com/CannabisNews Justice Archiveshttp://cannabisnews.com/news/list/justice.shtml

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Comment #48 posted by FoM on April 03, 2007 at 11:50:40 PT
Live Web Cast a 3 ET Today
I thought maybe some people might want to check it out. http://www.barackobama.com/live/
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Comment #47 posted by FoM on March 31, 2007 at 17:50:04 PT
Whig
I agree he must comment on marijuana and the law. He will I'm sure because they always ask any person who is running for President about Marijuana. It's almost a standard question it seems since at least Clinton.
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Comment #46 posted by whig on March 31, 2007 at 17:40:47 PT
FoM
I really like Barack Obama but until and unless he says something to address the question of support for our issue, I cannot favor him over Bill Richardson.I won't accept that he admits past use as a proxy for his present position. He also "used a little blow" but I don't think anyone assumes he wants to legalize cocaine.Barack Obama has an obligation to speak to us, or we have no reason to believe he supports us.
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Comment #45 posted by whig on March 31, 2007 at 17:38:27 PT
museman #40
It makes sense to me, we are here now and we are exercising our free will, which coincides with God's will if we are doing what he wants us to do. That is to say, we have the free will to choose to be good to one another, that is all we must do if we are walking in the way God desires.If you are doing this and I am doing this then there are two of us, and if there are two of us then there are four, and if four then eight, and if you look around on the blogs you will see there are more than you might have imagined. We have been here all the time, but we had no way to talk to one another, and we were kept isolated by those who wanted to keep us under their power.Does that make sense to you?
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Comment #44 posted by FoM on March 31, 2007 at 17:24:42 PT
Obama Webcast
Even if a person doesn't like Obama this is really interesting because of the number of communities getting together today. The Internet really is amazing.http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/hacwebcast/
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Comment #43 posted by FoM on March 31, 2007 at 14:22:28 PT
museman
This is how I look at Obama. I watch when he is on tv and I've watched some of the videos. So far I like what I see and hear but he hasn't been put through the fire yet. He is articulate and generates a good sense about him but time will tell. If he says something intelligent about marijuana and the law I will stand with him otherwise I will just wait and see if someone better comes along.
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Comment #42 posted by museman on March 31, 2007 at 11:16:28 PT
adding to #41
I really liked Kucinich when he came to my town and we had a nice get together in the local health-food restaurant. Then things he said got me politically inspired again, so much so that against my strong intuition, life experience, and knowledge of 'how it really is,' I ended up campaigning vigorously for Kerry, because of Kucinich. He served as a fake representation of radical left ideology, to make us think that the democratic party actually gave a shit about the many issues of freedom that Kucinich was cheered for his passionate responses. As far as I can tell that pudding has been made, and the proof is in it.I am staying away from Obama, because though I can't possibly believe that any politican is anything other than a player and a scammer, out of respect for my friends, and because everyone deserves a chance to make the right decisions, I will wait and see with him. 
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Comment #41 posted by museman on March 31, 2007 at 11:04:14 PT
Hope
"He'd rather work on his "carbon footprint" than get abused people out of prison or change unjust laws."Thanks Hope for pointing this out. Gore is a perfect example of the 'good politician.' Like the 'good cop, bad cop routine.' Looks good, sounds good, has picked (albeit 30 years too late) an issue of real, but ambiguous concern to a large number of consumers -which will probably net him much prestige, as well as keep his bank account above declination. He lived on 'The Farm.' So what? What did that feudal, aristocratic commune have to do with what real people were doing? Gaskin was just another hippy guru with more press coverage -probably because they selected most of their 'community' from american wealthocracy. How do I know this? There was an attempt at one point to network and integrate many of the functioning communes, in which there were exchanges of information and community members- I lived on one of those at the time.As a note -when volunteers were asked for, I was told point blank that I wasn't 'classy' enough.Gore. Kerry. Edwards. Kucinich. Good politicians all, but I think their humanity doesn't measure up to their mouth. 
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Comment #40 posted by museman on March 31, 2007 at 09:15:23 PT
whig# 28
"Nature abhors a vacuum. Authority cannot be destroyed, but it can be removed from unjust hands and distributed, according to the will of God. Do you concur?"About nature, yes. About authority? I'd like to. However it has been my understanding and experience, that the factor of 'free will' applies to corrupt people as well as not. I will agree that such an action or event as 'redistributing authority' is well within the purvue and power of God, however, until life ends God will respect your (anyones) right to choose error. As long as the people put their trust in errant fools -like every politician there ever was (I'm sorry, but even the closest-to-real politician is still in the same cammp as the rest of 'em.) then God is still quite capable of turning his face away.It 'can' happen. Everyone could wake up one morning and get it, but not without the over-all collective desire TO get it.False authority can, has been, and will be destroyed by the same formula.The responsibility is mans', not Gods'.Does that make sense to you?
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Comment #39 posted by Hope on March 31, 2007 at 08:50:38 PT
Yeah! Because we're right!
"....our opinions are formed and strong.":0)
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Comment #38 posted by FoM on March 31, 2007 at 08:40:10 PT
Hope
He's set in his ways because of his age and that is a worry to me too. We are his age and our opinions are formed and strong.
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Comment #37 posted by Hope on March 31, 2007 at 08:33:33 PT
Gore
I just can't trust him anymore. He could have helped this situation long ago...and he hasn't. I think that means he's not going to.He'd rather work on his "carbon footprint" than get abused people out of prison or change unjust laws.Gore isn't ever going to do the right thing in this matter...or he would have...a long time ago.
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Comment #36 posted by FoM on March 31, 2007 at 06:25:06 PT
Toker00
I don't know why Democrats aren't popular in the south. They are so much nicer then the Republicans who want us all to become fundamentalist Christians and listen to organizations like the Christian Coalition in the Republican Party. I believe in God but I believe that people's faith shouldn't be used to push laws against those who don't believe in God. That's freedom to think and believe as we should be allowed to do. As far as the Constitution goes hasn't the Republican Party basically done it in during this administration? I don't see freedom for the people a concern at all with Bush and his people.I like Obama because he thinks before he speaks. He has worked as a civil rights attorney which means he cares for the people. He has seen the poor and tried to help them and that is what is important to me. This is hard for me to say but my generation said we shouldn't trust anyone over thirty. Now that isn't true but the point is that as we get older we get set in our ways and we can't relate to the youth of today. I am 59. I am the age of Gore or Hillary and I know that I can't relate like I could before. Reagan was 70 and he got Alzheimers so age matters to me with who we elect. Never again will someone that old who could die at anytime get my vote. There is a time for every season under the sun and there is a time when we need to say it's time to pass it on to a younger generation. If Obama slips because of Hillary and Bill trying to destroy him I hope Gore jumps in and blows their doors off. A Gore - Obama ticket would be fine with me if that would happen. Gore has to explain his views on marijuana first though since he spent time at The Farm when he and his wife were young. No place to hide now with the expansion of the Internet.
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Comment #35 posted by Toker00 on March 31, 2007 at 04:41:14 PT
FoM mayan
Those are excellent "dots" at two points of the Conscience. Mayan, I have to agree with you about Ron Paul. There is something very strong about the foundation of that document, The Constitution of The United States of America. Would you like to know what it is? Freedom of Belief. Just another word for Free Will. Unalienable Rights. Rights given by the Creator and Irremovable by Man. And that is SELF EVIDENT! But he will bring back the Party in Power who has delivered the sermon of DEAth to the Constitution and Power to the Corporations. But what did I say a Republican sees when he looks in the mirror? A Democrat. So your point is very valid that his stand on the Constitution is far more important than his party affiliation. I just wish he would run as an Independent.FoM, I share with you the dilemma of voting for a Republican (Reagan) and receiving a slap up side my conscience. I didn't vote in either election for Clinton, or anyone else, but I would have gotten the same thing if I had. I DID vote for Gore and Kerry. Would they have given us a Peaceful world? Would you say we are both able to make a more informed decision now? I would. I'm running them all through the strainer.Toke.  
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Comment #34 posted by FoM on March 30, 2007 at 18:32:43 PT
mayan
I can tell you really like Ron Paul and that's good. I care about the people in the USA and issues that I wish could be fixed. I am not political in my beliefs because I've never been involved in politics until I voted for Kerry. I voted one other time for Reagan. That was dumb of me voting for Reagan now that I can look back I see the error of my vote. I just am concerned and follow my concerns.
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Comment #33 posted by mayan on March 30, 2007 at 18:23:44 PT
FoM
First and foremost, Ron Paul cares about The Constitution. I don't care what party he's in. First and foremost, he is a true American. 
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Comment #32 posted by whig on March 30, 2007 at 18:07:32 PT
Toker00
Skepticism is well justified, and so is patience, nor should you or I or anyone let up for a minute until we are satisfied, which is not yet.I'm just looking at the growth of the blogs as the new center, replacing the old MSM. Web 2.0, whatever you want to call it, is growing geometrically.
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Comment #31 posted by Toker00 on March 30, 2007 at 17:53:02 PT
Sorry whig.
It's about six months or so too soon for me to see who is going to survive this out of the gate optimism. I give these men who are testing the water all their due respect. I'm not going to concentrate too heavily on these politicians right now. There are too many people to awaken from this groggy illusion. It's scary because you never know what some of these people's reaction will be. Some fly off the handle. Some laugh you off. Some look stunned. When I start seeing some of these eyes open around here, I'll start listening to who is saying what in La La land. If it doesn't reflect what these newly awakened people including myself are thinking and saying, I'm going right back to banging on the pot. Then I'll check in around the last lap. Of course I'll be here everyday, too. We'll see, won't we?Toke.  
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Comment #30 posted by FoM on March 30, 2007 at 17:12:23 PT

mayan
I believe that Ron Paul is a very good man from what I have seen and read. I am not looking at this next election the same way maybe you and others are. I am not a Republican or a Libertarian because I don't believe the way they believe. I am more a Democrat or a Green. We should vote what our heart tells us to do if we care about who is our next President. I care about more then changing the laws on Cannabis. There are other issues that are really important to me and Conservatives just don't care about some of the things that matter to me.
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Comment #29 posted by mayan on March 30, 2007 at 16:54:24 PT

Ron Paul
He is the only candidate that can draw support from all across the political spectrum. He wants to help us take our country back but we have to help him first!!! We MUST make him our candidate. If you support cannabis law reform and 9/11 Truth how can you not support Ron Paul? Just my two cents.
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Comment #28 posted by whig on March 30, 2007 at 15:50:39 PT

museman
Nature abhors a vacuum. Authority cannot be destroyed, but it can be removed from unjust hands and distributed, according to the will of God. Do you concur?
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Comment #27 posted by whig on March 30, 2007 at 15:46:14 PT

Understanding
Neuroleptics are made from pesticide.
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Comment #26 posted by whig on March 30, 2007 at 15:44:15 PT

OT Alzheimer's drug
http://www.guardian.co.uk/frontpage/story/0,,2046431,00.html
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Comment #25 posted by FoM on March 30, 2007 at 15:41:55 PT

Just a Comment
I've been busy today and now am watching the NBC Nightly News for the first time in years and it really is amazing to watch our country slipping so badly in about every way possible. That just shows me that when you put priorities in the wrong order really bad things can happen. That's all for now.
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Comment #24 posted by museman on March 30, 2007 at 15:17:07 PT

whig 
Yes, the walls of the governing, the controlling, and the 'authority.'Down with it all. Trash it, and burn it...at least metaphoricly. Trash and burn it within our hearts and minds. Purge the corruption with the sacred illumination of the truth, a fire that only burns those who fear it.And...Thank God for the flashlight!
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Comment #23 posted by FoM on March 30, 2007 at 13:26:56 PT

About Senator Obama
I check out Hillary's web site and it doesn't have hardly any activity. I can't get over how the donations are going up so quickly on Obama's web site. I thought some here might want to see it.http://www.barackobama.com/
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Comment #22 posted by whig on March 30, 2007 at 12:37:29 PT

museman
Sunlight is always the best disinfectant, but when you are in the depths of the dungeon it's a bit hard to illuminate when all you have is a flashlight.What needs to happen in this case is the walls have to come down.
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Comment #21 posted by museman on March 30, 2007 at 11:43:47 PT

I would like
To tell a story.Once I had a job as a janitor, working as a civilian for the USN. I got the job through a 'human resource' program called WIN (work incentive program). It was an ok job, but the pay wasn't great.I suppose there would have been nothing worthy of a tale, if I hadn't discovered- along with a few of my co-workers that there was some funny business going on.Through careful investigation, and clandestine meetings after work, 5 of the 6 employees decided to form a union.Here's what we discovered;The 'company' that hired us was 2 sailors whose job it was to oversee the process.They were getting paid 3 times! Once from the Navy for doing the job they hired us to do. Again from the navy for their 'civilian' business, and once from the state -who paid half our wages. The scam was, that they employ us for 6 months as 'training' and then the state would stop paying, and they would have to pay our wages themselves.After asking around, we discovered, that though these guys had been at this for a couple of years, there was not a single employee who was paid by them, all of us were part of the 6 month program. As soon as the 6 month period was up, they would fire you, and get another from the state.In our 'union' we decided to take the information to the 'proper authorities,' which we did.We went -all together to the State Supervisor for WIN. We gave him our evidence. He listened, and thanked us for 'bringing this to' his 'attention.' He told us to go on back to work on monday (this was a friday) and not to do anything else. No to worry, they would take care of it.What do you suppose was waiting for us next monday?Pink slips.Do I need to elaborate?

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Comment #20 posted by whig on March 30, 2007 at 10:01:43 PT

Toker00
Richardson is at least supporting medical marijuana, publicly and in his actions. That's all I'm saying. If you don't want to vote for anyone I respect that completely.
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Comment #19 posted by Toker00 on March 30, 2007 at 09:24:29 PT

Unless someone promises to fulfill even ONE of 
those requests, how can I vote for them? Because by fulfilling even ONE of those requests, it will be a domino effect for the others.When we start to see all these organizations we have been supporting in order to get Dems back in Congress get behind their front runners we'll see whether there will be change or not. We already know that change has not come in two thousands years and unlikely to come in '08 unless we DO THE RIGHT THINGS. Two Right Things are exposing 9-11 Truth and the other is Ending Cannabis Prohibition, Totally. Not doing the Right or Righteous Thing will give us the exact same thing we have seen since governments began. Do we continue to believe in and produce governments based on the Love of Money, or the Love of God? Do we intend to continue with the Religion of Business? Remember, business is about property and profit. Religions are Businesses that sell Beliefs. God is Righteousness, not beliefs. One God. No Religion. No Business. Only Righteousness. No Kings. No Queens. Just People Sharing All The World. Governors of Righteousness, not Leaders of Business. People who Care, for Free. Brothers and Sisters in the Family of God, not Man. That's Righteous. Business is Selfishness. Religions are Businesses. The Bible contains the Laws of Righteousness, but it also contains translations and interpretations of Rulers throughout History. A Reliable, yet Unreliable book. That is why we are told to ALSO read other GOOD books. I gave the Library at my Community College a list of book requests. They were all books about 9-11 Truth. I also want to request any good books out there about the Truth of Cannabis. Can someone help with suggestions? I mean besides Jack's Wonderful Cannabis Bible. That will be on top of the list.I Love you guys.Toke.
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Comment #18 posted by whig on March 30, 2007 at 08:12:26 PT

Toker00
I'm not the one who has been encouraging voting. Are you advocating the non-vote now?
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Comment #17 posted by The GCW on March 30, 2007 at 06:15:49 PT

Just tried but it over
I just tried to vote on it, but it's already over.-Action Alert - Tell Moveon.Org You Want DennisThis vote takes only about 30 seconds but YOU MUST VOTE BEFORE MIDNIGHT TONIGHT.So please take a moment NOW to tell MoveOn.org to invite Dennis to its "Virtual Town Hall Meeting" being held on April 10.Click Here to vote: http://kucinich.us/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?q=477230&u=617 
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Comment #16 posted by The GCW on March 30, 2007 at 06:04:42 PT

VOTE to include Kucinich
Action Alert - Tell Moveon.Org You Want DennisThis vote takes only about 30 seconds but YOU MUST VOTE BEFORE MIDNIGHT TONIGHT.So please take a moment NOW to tell MoveOn.org to invite Dennis to its "Virtual Town Hall Meeting" being held on April 10.Click Here to vote: http://kucinich.us/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?q=477230&u=617Rather than let all the candidates be heard, MoveOn only plans to invite candidates who receive support from 10 percent or more of the people who respond to its poll. So it's important that everyone you know is urged to vote. Please support Dennis now, then forward this message to all your progressive lists. People do NOT have to be a "member" of MoveOn.org to vote (although they will have to provide an email address.)This is a great opportunity for Dennis to reach out to primary voters across the nation, and for our campaign to get the word out to MoveOn.Org that Dennis Kucinich is THE Progressive candidate. Click Here to vote: http://kucinich.us/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?q=477230&u=617Please help! Thank you! 
Kucinich for President 2008 
www.kucinich.us( (((Kucinich is the only candidate that said He will regulate cannabis like alcohol and put it on His plantform))) )
 

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Comment #15 posted by Sukoi on March 30, 2007 at 03:45:20 PT

Ron Paul
Don't forget about Ron Paul. He has been very vocal about ending the "DrugWar" for years.
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Comment #14 posted by Toker00 on March 30, 2007 at 03:26:01 PT

whig
They've never done anything for us. Only for the State. Many Businesses will profit greatly from cannabis based medicines. Many Religions will be relieved of their guilt. Many Citizens will say there's your medicine, but if we catch you with the original naturally produced ingredient, we will STILL put you in Prison, we will still call you Hippie and hate you just as before. Making cannabis partially legal only makes portions of us acceptable, and only ONE lie about cannabis destroyed. Not only is cannabis medicine, but it is all the other True things we say about it. Until it is totally legalized, it's powers will be limited, and our ability to create our New Earth will be limited, too. Richardson is still a Liar, whig. He's just lying less than the others. When a Man says let's end all the Wars. I'll vote for Him.When a Man says let's cure all the Diseases. I'll vote for Him.When a Man says let's love all the People. I'll vote for Him.When a Man says let's share all the World. I'll vote for Him.I'm still waiting...Toke. 
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Comment #13 posted by whig on March 30, 2007 at 00:09:32 PT

Richardson
The only candidate who has done anything for us. Anything at all. Think about it.
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Comment #12 posted by Wayne on March 29, 2007 at 22:33:10 PT

OT: Another Poison Warning from the FDA
There's a Parkinson's drug on the market that just got pulled by the FDA. They've known about the problem for FOUR YEARS!! And they're JUST NOW doing something about it. Read the article, if you dare...be warned, you'll probably get angry. If you read the article in its entirety, you'll see that they're making a lot of the same arguments we make about cannabis.Why more people don't see the blatant conflict of interest between the FDA and BigPharma is beyond me at this point.Congress is going crazy with all of their hearing lately, I think they need to hold one regarding the FDA's incompetence.
Parkinson's Drug Pergolide Withdrawn Over Heart Concerns
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Comment #11 posted by FoM on March 29, 2007 at 20:44:53 PT

Hope
I never liked Bill Clinton. He reminded me of a politician who really wanted to be a Republican. I think Hillary is more of a Republican in many respects. As far as Obama goes I know he is very popular with young people and he is liberal and trying to stay out of the politics in Washington but it must be very hard. I would guess that Obama would bring the Crack and Cocaine sentences closer together. I think he will stop the raids in California. I believe treatment for those addicted will become more important then sending people to jail. I think that because of what he says in general but we will know when they do some college tours and questions are asked.
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Comment #10 posted by The GCW on March 29, 2007 at 20:42:15 PT

From Laura Kriho
From Laura KrihoNederland, ColoradoMar. 29, 2007US CO: LTE: Peace Tax Fund by April 15On Feb. 6, it was revealed that the U.S. lost $12 billion in cash it sent to Iraq between 2003 and 2004. The cash was sent from the Federal Reserve in New York in the form of 483 palettes of $100 bills. Now those 360 tons of cash are missing.We need look no further at who is funding the insurgents that are killing our soldiers in Iraq. We are! That money didn't go to rebuild roads or schools. It went straight into the hands of the insurgents to buy guns, IEDs and chemical weapons to kill our soldiers.As Tax Day approaches, we need to de-fund the war ourselves by demanding that Congress enact a Peace Tax Fund that is guaranteed not to fuel the Iraq War, as an alternative to the sending taxes to the IRS and the U.S. Treasury general fund. I have contacted all of Colorado's Congressional delegation on this matter and await their reply. I encourage all citizens to contact members of Congress toll-free, 24 hours/day at (800) 459-1887.http://www.summitdaily.com/article/20070329/LETTER/103290063
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Comment #9 posted by Hope on March 29, 2007 at 20:05:42 PT

Taylor121 Comment 2
That worries me, too. We've been burnt by politicians so many times.
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Comment #8 posted by Hope on March 29, 2007 at 20:04:07 PT

Clinton's "I didn't inhale."
It never occurred to me then, but it has now, just now, knowing the way Clinton operated and his "language skills".He ate his cannabis....brownies...betcha.
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Comment #7 posted by FoM on March 29, 2007 at 19:40:14 PT

Morro Bay Medical Marijuana Dispensary Bust
Video Link: http://tinyurl.com/33fbt7
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Comment #6 posted by FoM on March 29, 2007 at 18:39:04 PT

RevRayGreen 
That sounds good to me.
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Comment #5 posted by RevRayGreen on March 29, 2007 at 18:25:06 PT

My vote for
Obama hinges on the questions soon to be answered.(With
11+ states already having medical marijuana programs, he
can carry 11+ states into it if he says he will) .......#1-allow medical cannabis and compassionate laws regarding#2-Bringing the troops home #3-a review of marijuana posession laws compared to
deadlier street drugs.
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Comment #4 posted by FoM on March 29, 2007 at 18:19:49 PT

Taylor121
I really don't have an idea how he feels about drug laws. This is all I know about. Barack Obama on Drugs Democratic Jr Senator (IL); previously State Senator Understand why youngsters want to use drugs. 
Junkie. That's where I'd been headed: the final, fatal role of the young would-be black man. Except the highs hadn't been about me trying to prove what a down brother I was. Not by then, anyway. I got high for just the opposite effect, something that could push questions of who I was out of my mind, something that could flatten out the landscape of my heart, blur the edges of my memory. I had discovered that it didn't make any difference whether you smoked reefer in the white classmate's sparkling new van, or in the dorm room of some brother you'd met down at the gym, or on the beach with a couple of Hawaiian kids who had dropped out of school and now spent most of their time looking for an excuse to brawl. You might just be bored, or alone. Everybody was welcome into the club of disaffection. And if the high didn't solve whatever it was that was getting you down, it could at least help you laugh at the world's ongoing folly and see through all the hypocrisy and bullshit and cheap moralism. Source: Dreams from My Father, by Barack Obama, p. 87 Aug 1, 1996 http://www.ontheissues.org/2008/Barack_Obama_Drugs.htm
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Comment #3 posted by mayan on March 29, 2007 at 18:08:47 PT

The Biggest Concern
Considering that our last two Presidential elections have been stolen by the neo-cons, maybe election fraud should be of a bit more concern than whether or not a candidate consensually used this or that substance in the distant past.THE WAY OUT IS THE WAY IN...O'Donnell 9/11 Rant Reaches 30 Million Viewers:
http://prisonplanet.com/articles/march2007/290307odonnellrant.htmBreaking News: Rosie Talking Building 7 On The View:
http://911blogger.com/node/7328Criticism of film won't deter Cuban:
http://tinyurl.com/32nvy8Cuban Resolute Against Neo-Con Intimidation:
http://infowars.com/articles/sept11/loose_change_cuban_resolute_against_necon_intimidation.htmBreaking my silence on 9/11 Truth:
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_john_kus_070328_breaking_my_silence_.htmThe 9/11 Truth Domino Effect:
http://infowars.net/articles/march2007/290307domino.htm
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Comment #2 posted by Taylor121 on March 29, 2007 at 18:00:33 PT

The question is
How does he feel about drug law reform? Just because he has used these substances does not mean that he would help our cause of taxing and regulating marijuana for adults. Look at Bush as the obvious example. He smoked marijuana, we have him on tape admitting it. Yet even though he did this, he is a prohibitionist. Let's be careful at lining up Obama's past use with drug law liberalization. 
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Comment #1 posted by FoM on March 29, 2007 at 15:52:30 PT

Poll: Senator Obama
How do you think Barack Obama's admittance of previous cocaine use will affect his presidential bid?*** * He was stupid to admit it, and will suffer the consequences. * At least he actually admitted the truth instead of dodging the question. * He will win points by telling the truth. * Although it was the right thing to do, he will lose points. * Who cares about Barack? I'm Republican. * Who cares? I'm voting for another candidate. ***Please Vote: http://www.berkeleybeacon.com/
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