trey4sports
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- Dec 5, 2007
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i was surprised to hear Rand say that he wants to end the war on drugs. It's great that he took such a strong stand but it will be played on loop during his primary attack ads.
i was surprised to hear Rand say that he wants to end the war on drugs. It's great that he took such a strong stand but it will be played on loop during his primary attack ads.
I can see where these things might appeal to libertarians and maybe some liberals in a general election but how do they play with the Republicans that he has to win over to get the nomination in the primary?
i was surprised to hear Rand say that he wants to end the war on drugs. It's great that he took such a strong stand but it will be played on loop during his primary attack ads.
i was surprised to hear Rand say that he wants to end the war on drugs. It's great that he took such a strong stand but it will be played on loop during his primary attack ads.
I wonder how Rand will answer the question if he's asked whether marijuana should be legalized.
i was surprised to hear Rand say that he wants to end the war on drugs. It's great that he took such a strong stand but it will be played on loop during his primary attack ads.
It's like asking to be thrown into the briar patch. It is so easy to make a conservative case that the war on drugs is a colossal waste of money. Not only that, it will allow him to bring Pat Robertson's name into the mix which will appeal to evangelicals. It's like a goalie flashing open the five-hole. As soon as the shot is taken, this opening will be closed in dramatic fashion. Any opponent will be demolished if they try it - which of course, they will.![]()
He said he was committed to ending the war on drugs. To me that goes further than just legalizing marijuana. I found the answer to the global warming question interesting. "There's no question that carbon is increasing since the industrial revolution". But he never said anything about whether carbon was causing global warming. Then he talked about middle ground solutions that don't wreck the economy and finished of with a "deregulate alternative fuels" coup de grace. I can't believe Bill Maher is such an idiot on the subject. Then again I can.
But in this interview he said that he supports ending the war on drugs, but he's never said that he supports legalizing marijuana. So he must not view "ending the war on drugs" as being the same thing as "legalizing marijuana." Maybe he just meant "end the federal war on drugs and send the issue back to the states," or "stop the mass incarceration of non violent drug offenders."
http://reason.com/blog/2013/05/13/rand-paul-assures-evangelicals-that-he-d
Like I mentioned above, I don't think he would have promoted ending the war on drugs on such a public platform if he wasn't 100% ready to defend that position and turn it into a winner.
And you are correct, "end the war on drugs" <> "legalize drugs". He has said before (like his father) that it should be treated like a medical issue. And coincidentally enough this "dea raids nfl teams" thing comes up at just the right time for him to promote the thought his father promoted that the war on drugs is a war on doctors.
So let me see if I understand you. Unless Rand supports passing a law saying that all states must legalize marijuana that's not good enough? Seriously?Never in the history of the U.S. has the federal government every passed a law saying that states must legalize the use of any particular substance. When prohibition of alcohol was repealed states still could choose to be dry if they really really want to do so.
You cannot end the federal war on drugs without de facto legalization of drugs at the federal level. I'm not sure what some of you are wanting Rand to say.
No, I'm saying that in the past he's said that he doesn't support laws like the one in Colorado that legalize marijuana.
Now he's saying that he wants to "end the war on drugs." So if we're going to assume that he hasn't changed his past position, then Rand's claim that he wants to "end the war on drugs" doesn't mean that he endorses state efforts to completely legalize all drugs.
Is there not a difference between legalization and decriminalization? I look at legalize as regulate and arguably "approve". Whereas I see ending the war on drugs as more of a deregulation at the federal level or no opinion. Or Return it to the state level as you said. I think we pretty much agree here.
A) Where has he said that? He didn't say that in that stupid Reason article you posted which actually refutes your position.
B) As president what the hell difference does that make? A president doesn't have veto power of Colorado law. All a president can do is to override it by federal law.
Again, why the hell should he? He's not running for governor of Colorado.