who is getting your vote?

Who will recieve your vote?


  • Total voters
    39
  • Poll closed .
Status
Not open for further replies.

Inneedofbuds

Well-Known Member
The Dems as have the Repubs had ample opportunity for the decriminalization of Pot.
None have done it yet, and to think by electing Obama will change it is naive at best.
I've already said in another thread I don't think decriminilization will ever happen, so you can assume I don't think it will happen under Obama. What I have said repeatedly is that I do think he will end federal raids, based on the fact that in at least three different interviews he has said that he would. It also says very clearly on his website that he intends to do so. Now, I know you can just say he's lying, but thats the best I can see at this point.
 

Seamaiden

Well-Known Member
I've already said in another thread I don't think decriminilization will ever happen, so you can assume I don't think it will happen under Obama. What I have said repeatedly is that I do think he will end federal raids, based on the fact that in at least three different interviews he has said that he would. It also says very clearly on his website that he intends to do so. Now, I know you can just say he's lying, but thats the best I can see at this point.
Ok, I spent over 20 minutes scouring his site looking for ANYTHING on drug policy and couldn't find it. Care to link us? Because I know what I read there previously, and he states that drug use is immoral. His shit keeps changing, and not in the way that we're looking for.
 

Spitzered

Well-Known Member
I don't know if he is lying or not. But I think that he is politician that says things that he can't live up to. Politics is all about concessions and he might have to put that on the chopping block. 'Read my lips' comes to mind.
 

Inneedofbuds

Well-Known Member
Ok, I spent over 20 minutes scouring his site looking for ANYTHING on drug policy and couldn't find it. Care to link us? Because I know what I read there previously, and he states that drug use is immoral. His shit keeps changing, and not in the way that we're looking for.
welp, i also can't find anything on his website. I could have sworn he had something there under the healthcare section. Looks like I was wrong. But you can look here.

Sen. Barack Obama


On April 19, 2007, Sen. Obama voted against the Coburn amendment, which, if enacted, could put medical marijuana patients and caregivers at even greater risk than they already face and could be used by opponents to attempt to shut down state medical marijuana programs across the country.

During a town hall meeting in Laconia, New Hampshire, on June 2, 2007, Sen. Obama was asked if he would continue the federal raids on medical marijuana patients and their caregivers. Sen. Obama responded: "I don't think that should be a top priority of us, raiding people who are using ... medical marijuana. With all the things we've got to worry about, and our Justice Department should be doing, that probably shouldn't be a high priority."


There is also a video of him saying he will end federal raids at the bottom.
 

Inneedofbuds

Well-Known Member
And McCain's view:
Sen. John McCain

On October 23, at a town hall event in Exeter, GSMM staff asked Sen. McCain, "Voters and legislators in 12 states have passed laws protecting the seriously ill who use medical marijuana with their doctors' approval. George Bush's current federal policy is to have armed DEA agents raid and arrest these citizens. In fact, just recently one of Gov. Richardson's medical marijuana patients, Leonard French, a 44-year-old paraplegic, had armed DEA agents come into his house, put a gun to his head, handcuff him to his wheelchair … The last time I asked you this question, you said you would oppose medical marijuana legalization at the federal level."

Sen. McCain interrupted, "I still do."

The GSMM staff member continued on, "Okay, sir, that's fine, but it wasn't my question and it never was. At the last town hall meeting, you said if people are being raided, you would do everything in your power to put those raids to an end. Now that you know the raids are occurring, your staff has received evidence proving that, will you stand by your word and end the federal raids on medical marijuana patients?"

Sen. McCain responded, "I have no evidence that's the case except your word."

The GSMM staffer then drew attention to a letter from New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson (D) to President Bush, asking him to end the federal raids on patients, saying, "I have a letter from Bill Richardson talking about how his patients were raided."

Sen. McCain responded, "I have great respect for Gov. Richardson. Great respect, but I don't believe it … The law is the law, and I do not believe it's going to be changed, and it's not going to be changed by me. And you can keep coming to town hall meetings if you want to and ask this question in different ways, and I will be glad to respond in the same way."
 

Seamaiden

Well-Known Member
that's how all of you want to debate? A list a quote from a candidate and all you can say is that he's lying? Good to know I can say that anytime in the future for McCain. It's a pretty simple argument. Quotes? Who cares, he's lying. Facts, who cares, books lying. Yeah.. that works good. So what is McCain's stance on medical marijuana? One candidate say's he'll end the raids... as opposed to what? Continuing them? Much better...
Alright, I know you don't know who you're dealing with here, but let me be the first to guarantee you that I do not rely on the words of a politician alone. Wanna know where the meat is? Look to where the rubber meets the road, his VOTING RECORD.

So, you wanna play? Let's play. Because I am very good at this, and I can support all of my assertions (as long as he doesn't keep changing his playbook on me/us). So far you're not relying on his voting record, but his quotes. Be ready to receive the same shit you sling, then.

:twisted:

Ready.....????


Set...!


GO!


Let's start with a source that has no agenda other than simply telling the truth, shall we? I use ontheissues.org to check out all candidates who've held a position where they vote. This, by necessity, tends to leave out governors and the like. So, one must find other avenues, and I do.
Barack Obama on the Issues
Admitted marijuana use in high school & college

Long before he was in the national media spotlight, Barack Obama had this to say about himself: "Junkie. Pothead. That's where I'd been headed: the final, fatal role of the young would-be black man... I got high [to] push questions of who I was out of my mind." Obama's revelations were not an issue during his Senate campaign two years ago. But now his open narrative of early, bad choices, including drug use starting in high school and ending in college, are sure to receive new scrutiny. Source: Lois Romano, Washington Post, p. A1 Jan 3, 2007
And, continuing on this track, allow me to present you with a recent Washington Times article outlining his well-documented flip-flopping on this very issue. (You'll need to follow the link to see the video clips of Obama himself.)
Obama flip-flops on pot

Jennifer Haberkorn (Contact)
Thursday, January 31, 2008


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. (See clip below.)

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." (See clip below.)
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." (See clip below.)
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. (See clip below.)

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.
Gotta remember the linky-poo! :D
Washington Times - Obama flip-flops on pot

I have more (I always do). Are you ready? It's not pretty. Let me remind you that Mr. Veitor, Obama's spokesman, is claiming "definition confusion" for a man who has a degree as an attorney (not to mention that he passed the bar). If you aren't aware, your attorney is shit if s/he does not understand clear definitions of all terms and terminology, thusly leading to YOU being fucked.
He also took a paycheck as a teacher, so, again, unclear on definitions? My ASS. He wants to appeal to the most people possible, therefore he is playing the classic politician's game.

Someone like Ron Paul, however, has the years and years of voting records that back up his statements. He's got years of giving his paycheck as a representative back on his record. Did you know that? I bet you didn't. He's got his name on the very legislation that would remove criminal penalties on a federal level. How about your boy Obama...? Oh! That's right, he can't seem to make up his mind. Whoops.
 

Inneedofbuds

Well-Known Member
Alright, I know you don't know who you're dealing with here, but let me be the first to guarantee you that I do not rely on the words of a politician alone. Wanna know where the meat is? Look to where the rubber meets the road, his VOTING RECORD.

So, you wanna play? Let's play. Because I am very good at this, and I can support all of my assertions (as long as he doesn't keep changing his playbook on me/us). So far you're not relying on his voting record, but his quotes. Be ready to receive the same shit you sling, then.

:twisted:

Ready.....????


Set...!


GO!


Let's start with a source that has no agenda other than simply telling the truth, shall we? I use ontheissues.org to check out all candidates who've held a position where they vote. This, by necessity, tends to leave out governors and the like. So, one must find other avenues, and I do.
Barack Obama on the Issues
And, continuing on this track, allow me to present you with a recent Washington Times article outlining his well-documented flip-flopping on this very issue. (You'll need to follow the link to see the video clips of Obama himself.)
Gotta remember the linky-poo! :D
Washington Times - Obama flip-flops on pot

I have more (I always do). Are you ready? It's not pretty. Let me remind you that Mr. Veitor, Obama's spokesman, is claiming "definition confusion" for a man who has a degree as an attorney (not to mention that he passed the bar). If you aren't aware, your attorney is shit if s/he does not understand clear definitions of all terms and terminology, thusly leading to YOU being fucked.
He also took a paycheck as a teacher, so, again, unclear on definitions? My ASS. He wants to appeal to the most people possible, therefore he is playing the classic politician's game.

Someone like Ron Paul, however, has the years and years of voting records that back up his statements. He's got years of giving his paycheck as a representative back on his record. Did you know that? I bet you didn't. He's got his name on the very legislation that would remove criminal penalties on a federal level. How about your boy Obama...? Oh! That's right, he can't seem to make up his mind. Whoops.
wow, all that for nothing. You do understand the basic difference between decriminalization and ending federal raids right? Marijuana will never be decriminalized. Obama won't decrimanilize it, he doesn't want too, I never suggested he would. Ending federal raids is not decriminalization. So, although you've listed several examples of Obama not supporting decriminalization, nobody here suggested he had. Looks like you've wasted that brilliant debate skill of yours.
 

Seamaiden

Well-Known Member
Right on! Ok, so I can go ahead and break out more of what I have (which is extensive). :D

Alright fellas, let's GOOOOOOOO...!!!! (I've got Ballroom Blitz playing in my head) :lol:
Bloomberg.com: Politics
Obama's Voting Record Complicates His Shift to Center (Update2)
By Kristin Jensen



July 8 (Bloomberg) -- Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama is trying to claim the political center, following in the footsteps of previous nominees including Republican Ronald Reagan in 1980. Yet the Illinois senator has a higher hurdle than most: a consistently liberal voting record.
In recent weeks, Obama said he supports gun-ownership rights, backs legislation giving immunity to telephone companies that participated in an anti-terrorism surveillance program and would consider cutting corporate taxes. On July 3, he said he would ``continue to refine my policies'' on the Iraq War.
Obama built his candidacy on the support of his party's liberal base, which favors restrictions on guns and wiretapping, raising taxes for companies, and pulling U.S. forces from Iraq. As an Illinois state legislator, he voted against a law carving out self-defense exceptions to local handgun bans; as a U.S. senator, he opposed business tax cuts and extending warrantless eavesdropping, and backed tougher gun laws. On Iraq, he has long focused on ending the war and withdrawing troops.
The candidate is now trying to fend off Arizona Senator John McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee, who needs to try to ``unmask Obama as an old-style liberal in a flashy new costume,'' said Trent Duffy, a former aide to President George W. Bush and a partner at the Washington communications firm HDMK.
`Seeming Authenticity'
At the same time, changing positions may present risks by endangering one of Obama's biggest assets, his ``seeming authenticity,'' said Mark Corallo, a strategist who worked on Republican Fred Thompson's presidential bid.
Obama, 46, rejects the notion that he is trying to move to the center.
``The people who say this apparently haven't been listening to me,'' Obama said today during a campaign stop in Powder Springs, Georgia. ``The message I want to send to everybody is: You're not going to agree with me on 100 percent of what I think, but don't assume that, if I don't agree with you on something, that it must be because I'm doing that politically.''
Gun control emerged as an issue last month after the Supreme Court struck down Washington's handgun ban. McCain, 71, quickly praised the decision.
Past Votes
Obama was on the defensive because of past support for more restrictive laws. In addition to the 2004 state vote on the self- defense bill, which critics said might eviscerate local handgun bans, Obama in 2005 voted as a U.S. senator to expand the types of banned ammunition and against a measure protecting gun makers and sellers from lawsuits.
On June 26, Obama said he has ``always believed'' in gun- ownership rights, though he supports ``common-sense'' restrictions. Washington's law ``overshot the runway,'' he said in an interview with Bloomberg Television that day.
On surveillance, Obama last year voted against expanding the wiretapping program for six months. Now, he backs a bill that would end lawsuits against telephone companies and allow surveillance to continue.
The new bill has changes and is a ``compromise'' reflecting the importance of getting ``that program in place,'' Obama told reporters in Ohio on July 1.
Questions on Taxes
Obama also faces questions on taxes. In 2006, he voted against extending write offs for small businesses and Bush's cuts to the capital-gains rates.
Campaigning June 9 in North Carolina, he assailed Bush's ``tax breaks for big corporations and wealthy CEOs.'' A week later, he told the Wall Street Journal that corporate tax rates could be reduced after eliminating loopholes.
Some of the Republican charges of flip-flopping are misplaced. Last month, Obama drew fire for denouncing a Supreme Court decision barring the death penalty for child rapists. Yet in his 2006 book, ``The Audacity of Hope,'' he wrote that some crimes are ``so heinous'' that capital punishment is justified.
As examples, Obama cited ``mass murder'' or ``the rape and murder of a child.'' On June 25, he told reporters that ``the rape of a small child, 6 or 8 years old, is a heinous crime.''
In other cases, the criticism may be tougher to deflect. On Iraq, Republicans seized on recent comments by the candidate and his staff as evidence that he might backtrack from his 16-month withdrawal plan. His foreign-policy adviser, Susan Rice, said July 1 on MSNBC that he would ``redeploy our forces responsibly, at a rate that our commanders say is safe and sustainable.''
Leaving Iraq
Obama said last week and again today that he has always called for the U.S. to be as ``careful'' leaving Iraq as it was ``careless'' getting in and said his plan to end the war hasn't changed. Yet his comment about how a trip to Iraq would allow him to ``refine'' his policies was assailed as evidence he was backpedaling.
``The hard-core left is willing to tolerate some of those shifts,'' Duffy said. Any change on Iraq, though, ``is a bridge too far.''
In 2005, his first full year in the U.S. Senate, Obama earned 100 percent ratings from the AFL-CIO labor federation and Americans for Democratic Action, according to Congressional Quarterly. Those ratings were 93 percent and 95 percent in 2006.
Obama also favored restoring habeas corpus rights to suspected terrorists, while opposing the confirmations of Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito and Chief Justice John Roberts, and a constitutional amendment prohibiting flag burning.
Obama, who has campaigned as a politician who can bridge partisan divides, voted with his party 97 percent of the time last year, 96 percent the year before and 97 percent in 2005, according to Congressional Quarterly. McCain's ``party unity'' scores in the last three years were 90 percent, 76 percent and 84 percent; in 2001, the Republican supported his party just 67 percent of the time.
Ready for more? You are in need, but not of buds. ;)
 

Seamaiden

Well-Known Member
wow, all that for nothing. You do understand the basic difference between decriminalization and ending federal raids right? Marijuana will never be decriminalized. Obama won't decrimanilize it, he doesn't want too, I never suggested he would. Ending federal raids is not decriminalization. So, although you've listed several examples of Obama not supporting decriminalization, nobody here suggested he had. Looks like you've wasted that brilliant debate skill of yours.
I think I actually have a better grasp than what you're demonstrating. :D Ending federal raids is tantamount to removing penalties, as a raid is one hell of a penalty in and of itself. So, how's he gonna stop the Alphabet Boys from making their raids if he's in office without decriminalization? Best he can offer us at this point is a rescheduling, and he's not putting that on the table. And I'm serious with that question, how is he going to end federal raids without changing the law?

That's like the people insisting that he's gonna get us out of Iraq, while, again on HIS official site, he talks about increasing ground troops by OVER 100,000. Increasing an already under-paid military by a huge city's-worth of people (wondering where the money's gonna come from for that), but to what end? Connecting the dots isn't really that hard.

Reading is wonderful. Reading comprehension, even better. :blsmoke:
 

misshestermoffitt

New Member
Can anyone tell me what a candidate will do for me instead of what their opposition won't do for me?

Thats why politics suck, it's never "I will do this and that to help you citizens" it always "he says this and does that" finger pointing crap.
 

natrone23

Well-Known Member
That's like the people insisting that he's gonna get us out of Iraq, while, again on HIS official site, he talks about increasing ground troops by OVER 100,000. Increasing an already under-paid military by a huge city's-worth of people (wondering where the money's gonna come from for that), but to what end? Connecting the dots isn't really that hard.

Reading is wonderful. Reading comprehension, even better. :blsmoke:
Is it so hard to fathom that we could leave Iraq, and still need an increase in troops, I have already explained to your husband this same point....here goes....We are currently fighting 2 wars, and what we have learned from fighting these wars is that the U.S does not have enough active duty forces to sustain 2 wars. When we leave Iraq we will still be in afghanistan, so we must be prepared for a second potential conflict to arise....wherever or if ever it does occour. Thats the point, you learn from you mistakes..........and by the way i'm not saying Obama has some future plans about invading countries or starting wars.....but as commander and chief it his responsibilty to have the military ready....in this case for a second conflict hence the troop increase........................but you believe he is lying...and he has some sinister plans........maybe your right......I'll guess we'll find out this year
 

Inneedofbuds

Well-Known Member
I think I actually have a better grasp than what you're demonstrating. :D Ending federal raids is tantamount to removing penalties, as a raid is one hell of a penalty in and of itself. So, how's he gonna stop the Alphabet Boys from making their raids if he's in office without decriminalization? Best he can offer us at this point is a rescheduling, and he's not putting that on the table. And I'm serious with that question, how is he going to end federal raids without changing the law?

That's like the people insisting that he's gonna get us out of Iraq, while, again on HIS official site, he talks about increasing ground troops by OVER 100,000. Increasing an already under-paid military by a huge city's-worth of people (wondering where the money's gonna come from for that), but to what end? Connecting the dots isn't really that hard.

Reading is wonderful. Reading comprehension, even better. :blsmoke:
Wrong again. Marijuana is illegal on a federal level. This means, people can't trade marijuana over state lines. Walmart can't sell it, you can't have it delivered legally, anything that involves crossing state lines is illegal. Within state lines, the FEDS have no right to raid a facility that is selling only within state borders. That is the problem with raids today. They go past their authority and raid clinics practicing by legal state laws. This is why Bill Richardson wrote a letter asking Bush to end the raids. It was Bush's decision and his alone. Under Obama's Presidency, marijuana will still be illegal on a Federal level. You still won't be able to sell over state lines and there will be no national weed chains. The difference is, he will stop the FEDS from interfering with state business. So, you asked how is he going to end raids without changing the law? He doesn't have to. The current Federal law has no authority over the states and its current practice is illegal.

To quote you:

Reading is wonderful. Reading comprehension, even better.
 

ruby

Active Member
Is there anyone awake 8:25am the race is on and do nothing dems.except tax, tax,tax, vote themselves a raise and go on vacation are going to loose, loose,loose,...obama's momma was a whore in the mid 1960's, when the blacks still could not vote! Yes she was in Hawaii, with her skirt up and her tits out waiting a big black dick....down in shanti' town, found one with no legs, they were cut off in a violent drunk driving accident, then died in a violent one man drunk driving wreck. His dad has sired many children in Kenya and you want this seed to run the free world??? Check yourselves! I love my herb and will vote the way I want and to hell with the rest!!!! This is a wake up call....get up and smoke a big one....I already have! Good Luck with the Bastard O-Bomb-US!
 

unity

Well-Known Member
Is there anyone awake 8:25am the race is on and do nothing dems.except tax, tax,tax, vote themselves a raise and go on vacation are going to loose, loose,loose,...obama's momma was a whore in the mid 1960's, when the blacks still could not vote! Yes she was in Hawaii, with her skirt up and her tits out waiting a big black dick....down in shanti' town, found one with no legs, they were cut off in a violent drunk driving accident, then died in a violent one man drunk driving wreck. His dad has sired many children in Kenya and you want this seed to run the free world??? Check yourselves! I love my herb and will vote the way I want and to hell with the rest!!!! This is a wake up call....get up and smoke a big one....I already have! Good Luck with the Bastard O-Bomb-US!

What a sick fuck you are, you make the top of my daily list:clap:
What a pathetic 'life' you must live. I call that 'a slow miserable death', not a life. When we meet, identify yourself, and I will help you with your pain poor child.
 

unity

Well-Known Member
During the 50's and 60's era, any white woman who would "lay down" with a black man was considered "white trash" "a whore" "sleezy" "low down and no good" I heard it from the mouth of a man who should know he said it I didn't. Talking about your Barrack Hussain Oboma go to :clap:
ATLAH Daily Webcast - Manning Fierce Prayer for Bristol Palin
I bet your mommy got it really good from a ..... guy, in fact she liked it probably so much that you did not feel loved by her anymore. No wonder you turned into a racist pig:clap:
 

Seamaiden

Well-Known Member
Is it so hard to fathom that we could leave Iraq, and still need an increase in troops, I have already explained to your husband this same point....here goes....We are currently fighting 2 wars, and what we have learned from fighting these wars is that the U.S does not have enough active duty forces to sustain 2 wars. When we leave Iraq we will still be in afghanistan, so we must be prepared for a second potential conflict to arise....wherever or if ever it does occour. Thats the point, you learn from you mistakes..........and by the way i'm not saying Obama has some future plans about invading countries or starting wars.....but as commander and chief it his responsibilty to have the military ready....in this case for a second conflict hence the troop increase........................but you believe he is lying...and he has some sinister plans........maybe your right......I'll guess we'll find out this year
Ah, but then that means that those who just love Obama, those who are insisting that he's going to get us OUT of Iraq, are not looking at the big picture. Yes, it is very difficult to fathom that we would "need" the type of increase he speaks of, yet that we would not be going into any other wars (he's already talked about "aggressive diplomacy" with Iran, gosh, I wonder what that could mean :roll: ) where we really don't belong. As a matter of fact, the idea of increasing troop strength and NOT planning on going to war is fucking ridiculous.

And, you have yet to answer the first, most basic question with regard to increasing troops by the amounts this man is saying--HOW are we gonna pay them? We can't even pay well those we have now. We cannot properly treat them medically or psychologically. So, do you think he's got a real game plan to both fix what's broken and then make it BIGGER?

The moment the U.S. stops being the world police is the moment we don't have to worry about the size of our military, which is already appreciable. We'd actually be killing two birds with the same stone, because most of our "conflicts" have been created by our meddling where we don't belong and haven't been asked to go.

So, here's a concept. How about we focus instead on not getting into physical conflicts with other countries, especially those that have done nothing to the U.S. nor have asked for our interference? Eh? I know! Totally weird concept.
Wrong again. Marijuana is illegal on a federal level. This means, people can't trade marijuana over state lines. Walmart can't sell it, you can't have it delivered legally, anything that involves crossing state lines is illegal. Within state lines, the FEDS have no right to raid a facility that is selling only within state borders. That is the problem with raids today. They go past their authority and raid clinics practicing by legal state laws. This is why Bill Richardson wrote a letter asking Bush to end the raids. It was Bush's decision and his alone. Under Obama's Presidency, marijuana will still be illegal on a Federal level. You still won't be able to sell over state lines and there will be no national weed chains. The difference is, he will stop the FEDS from interfering with state business. So, you asked how is he going to end raids without changing the law? He doesn't have to. The current Federal law has no authority over the states and its current practice is illegal.

To quote you:

Reading is wonderful. Reading comprehension, even better.
Wow, you really believe that the federal stance on raids on dispensaries began with Bush? Either you don't know your recent modern history, or you don't remember, or you're so rabidly pro-Democrat that if it falls under the administration of a Dem you refuse to accept the facts.

I see why Dave found you so frustrating to deal with. Despite being hit with hard facts you refuse to concede anything. You seem to have made your mind up first, facts be damned. That's a little backwards, especially considering the legal heads who have been fighting this, at least here in Cali, since Prop. 215 was voted in back in 1996 (hint: Bush was not president then!) and Clinton said that he didn't care what the states voted for, HE was going to fight it and send federal agents after us. You conveniently keep skipping over that part.

Your insisting that something is so, or isn't so, does not at all make it so. You think you've got an ironclad case for stopping the feds without changing ANY laws? Then why the hell haven't you put your nose to the grindstone and helped those who are trying to make that happen no matter WHO'S POTUS???? Hmmm?

You wanted something more than quotes and people responding with "he's lying". You got it, yet you're not happy with it. You know, I still have more about Obama and his stance on marijuana use, a lot more. :D
 

medicineman

New Member
Ah, but then that means that those who just love Obama, those who are insisting that he's going to get us OUT of Iraq, are not looking at the big picture. Yes, it is very difficult to fathom that we would "need" the type of increase he speaks of, yet that we would not be going into any other wars (he's already talked about "aggressive diplomacy" with Iran, gosh, I wonder what that could mean :roll: ) where we really don't belong. As a matter of fact, the idea of increasing troop strength and NOT planning on going to war is fucking ridiculous.

And, you have yet to answer the first, most basic question with regard to increasing troops by the amounts this man is saying--HOW are we gonna pay them? We can't even pay well those we have now. We cannot properly treat them medically or psychologically. So, do you think he's got a real game plan to both fix what's broken and then make it BIGGER?

The moment the U.S. stops being the world police is the moment we don't have to worry about the size of our military, which is already appreciable. We'd actually be killing two birds with the same stone, because most of our "conflicts" have been created by our meddling where we don't belong and haven't been asked to go.

So, here's a concept. How about we focus instead on not getting into physical conflicts with other countries, especially those that have done nothing to the U.S. nor have asked for our interference? Eh? I know! Totally weird concept.

Wow, you really believe that the federal stance on raids on dispensaries began with Bush? Either you don't know your recent modern history, or you don't remember, or you're so rabidly pro-Democrat that if it falls under the administration of a Dem you refuse to accept the facts.

I see why Dave found you so frustrating to deal with. Despite being hit with hard facts you refuse to concede anything. You seem to have made your mind up first, facts be damned. That's a little backwards, especially considering the legal heads who have been fighting this, at least here in Cali, since Prop. 215 was voted in back in 1996 (hint: Bush was not president then!) and Clinton said that he didn't care what the states voted for, HE was going to fight it and send federal agents after us. You conveniently keep skipping over that part.

Your insisting that something is so, or isn't so, does not at all make it so. You think you've got an ironclad case for stopping the feds without changing ANY laws? Then why the hell haven't you put your nose to the grindstone and helped those who are trying to make that happen no matter WHO'S POTUS???? Hmmm?

You wanted something more than quotes and people responding with "he's lying". You got it, yet you're not happy with it. You know, I still have more about Obama and his stance on marijuana use, a lot more. :D
In a word, Bullshit........................This drivel is not worth refuting.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top