"It's No Longer a Matter of If, It's a Matter of When"
Staying high on marijuana legalization after the defeat of Proposition 19
On election night, I was in the driveway of the law offices of Bruce Margolin, head of the Los Angeles branch of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) and L.A.'s most famous pot-crime defense lawyer. The local marijuana community had gathered there to celebrate (or mourn) the vote returns on Proposition 19. This was California's high-profile chance to legalize the possession of up to an ounce of marijuana and to grow up to 25 square feet of marijuana plants. The proposition would also grant localities the power to allow higher limits for possession and growth, and, if they chose, to legalize, tax, and regulate sales.
An hour or so after the 8 p.m. poll closing, despite the optimism and polling that presaged victory a month ago, we all knew voters had rejected this opportunity to liberalize their state's marijuana laws, 54-46. The proposition won in only 10 of 58 counties—all but two on the state's west coast. Los Angeles, which had enjoyed (or to some, suffered) the greatest profusion of retail marijuana shops under California's existing medical pot regime, did not choose to legalize for all adults.
California's voters had been told by 19's proponents that legal pot for adults offered unprecedented opportunities for elevating both government revenue and racial justice, for redirecting police resources more helpfully, and for creating many good local jobs in the growth, processing, and sales of hemp and marijuana.
Those same voters had also been told that voting yes on 19 would lead to a flood of drugged drivers and zonked employees going unpunished and unpunishable, and an angry mob of federal agents meting out rough pot justice if the state went wobbly. The local option built into the proposition's language that would have freed localities from having the Bay Area's sense of pot's propriety imposed on the whole state was recast by opponents as a chaotic nightmare of different jurisdictions treating pot differently that would, somehow, be worse than the ways similar laws governing such matters as alcohol and guns already shift from county to county and city to city.
In the end, a half million more California voters chose to say no thanks to legal pot than chose to legalize it. A pro-19 effort of over a year, nearly $4 million in spending (more than 10 times as much as the official opposition to 19), and the tabling, door-hangering, and get-out-the-vote phone calling of many hundreds of volunteers was over, with nothing to show for it.
That's one way to look at what happened with Prop 19. But there in Margolin's driveway, where a small mob of 19 fans would gather every 20 minutes or so when the local news went live, cheering and shouting "Yes We Cannabis!," even when defeat was conceded, the phrase spilling most often from the lips of 19 spokeswoman Amanda Rain Brazel to the reporters and cameras was this: Pot legalization was "no longer a matter of if, but of when."
Richard Lee, a pot entrepreneur who runs both dispensaries in Oakland and Oaksterdam University, a school for would-be entrepreneurs in growing or selling the legally ambiguous leaf, was the proposition's prime funder and original sparkplug. He told the Sacramento Bee after his proposition's defeat, "We just need to do some research and see why people voted 'no'….We did get more votes than (gubernatorial candidate) Meg Whitman. And she spent more than $140 million. We need to look at the bright side."
At a telephone press conference the next morning from Oakland, representatives of various parts of the 19 coalition did just that, laying out their reasons for seeing potential victory in 19's apparent defeat. When Lee launched 19, most other elements of the drug law reform movement, from the NORML to the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP) to the Drug Policy Alliance (DPA) told him he was picking the wrong year, that he was moving ahead too early.
They eventually came on board after 19 made the ballot, and at the press conference Ethan Nadelmann of the DPA (whose most prominent supporter George Soros came in with a last-minute million dollars for the campaign that helped sponsor a rush of TV ads) admitted that "I was among those who initially tried to discourage Richard from going forward. We said 'wait until 2012.'…I called Richard a couple of weeks ago to say, 'Win or lose, you were right. Even if we don't prevail, the transformation in public dialogue, not just in California but nationally and internationally, has been nothing short of stupendous. The debate over marijuana legalization has been elevated to legitimacy.'"
Nadelmann and others in the Yes on 19 campaign also think it highly likely that the pressure of Proposition 19—and a desire to blunt its most sympathetic selling point, the damage done to people's lives by being dragged into the criminal justice system, even for a misdemeanor, merely for possession (61,000 such misdemeanor arrests in California last year)—led Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger last month to sign S.B. 1449 into law, which reduced the penalty for an ounce or less to a mere infraction and a $100 fine, the legal equivalent of a traffic ticket.
(Article continues after the video, "Brian Doherty Explains the Failure of Prop. 19 and What It Means for the Future of Pot Legalization.")
As many Prop. 19 activists told me, not even their most tenacious opponents were out to defend the drug war status quo. (And I noticed that almost no one anymore is willing to be loudly against medical marijuana, including even the loudest anti-19 spokespeople, 14 years after it passed in California amid great controversy.) People against 19 tried to be specifically against 19, not to fight over the wisdom of the drug war as it is actually waged.
A major complaint about 19 specifically was, as anti-19 speaker John Redman of Communities in Action said at an October debate at Cal State Fullerton, "Proposition 19 is called the regulate, tax and control cannabis act, but it doesn't do any of those things" since any specific regulations, taxes, and controls that might follow legalization were not built into the proposition but left up to localities. Enemies of 19 were unhappy—as were libertarian critics such as Jeffrey Miron and Walter Olson—that the proposition tried to protect legal users from being punished by their employers if their pot use did not lead to actual on-the-job impairment.
Still, exactly what set of concerns caused 19 to lose is still unclear, beyond a failure on the Yes campaign's part to greatly increase usual youth turnout, where their support was greatest. The Yes on 19 forces even had police out front and center, most prominently from Law Enforcement Against Prohibition; the opposition had police chief and narcotics officer unions among its biggest-buck supporters.
But the really big money never rolled in to the anti-19 campaign, not even from deep-pocketed interests with money at stake such as prison worker unions, prosecutors, and the alcoholic beverage world. As lobbyist John Lovell from 19's opposition said, "We always knew they would outspend us and we learned from Proposition 5 [a losing 2008 California initiative that would have reduced criminal penalties and increased treatment for nonviolent drug offenders] that we didn't have to match them dollar for dollar. We did have to raise enough to get our message out and once people understood what was in the measure they came with us and never went back." The slow fall in polled support for 19 over the past month gives some credence to Lovell's take; with only $300,000 or so to spend, the No on 19 campaign relied on earned media and some radio—and the editorial support of pretty much every paper in the state, as well as the political support of pretty much every politician.
A CNN poll shows, disturbingly, that voters who think of themselves as the most anti-government were more likely to be against getting the government out of harassing, fining, and arresting people for growing, selling, and using the sweet leaf. In fact, 67 percent of those who think government is doing too much were anti-19, as were 60 percent of those "angry" at the federal government and 71 percent of Tea Party supporters.
Polling done by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research shows a gap between those who believe in pot legalization and those who voted for 19. Fifty percent of their 800 polled voters believed marijuana should be legal, while 31 percent of people who said they were going to vote "no" on 19 also believed this. Something about Prop. 19 in particular bothered them, though as yet, as Nadelmann says, "we have no hard evidence whatsoever that any one of the provisions helped or hurt and no really good evidence about whether any particular message helped or hurt."
Initially there was evidence of what was being called the "reverse Bradley" effect—or more comically the "Broadus effect" (after famous pot devotee Snoop Dogg's real name). This is the idea that people were reluctant to tell a pollster they were for legal pot, but would feel free to let their freak flag fly in the privacy of the voting booth. (The proposition was doing better in robot polls than ones where a real human did the polling.) But in the end, despite the belief expressed by a leading 19 strategist early in the campaign, there were not as many closet 19 voters as there are closet pot smokers.
As the camera crews were packing up in Margolin's driveway, pot smokers were well out of the closet, with clouds of smoke openly filling even the press-segregated space on the opposite side of the wooden fence where the real party was happening. A long-haired, muscular man in a pot-competition-themed black T-shirt strode pranksterishly through, announcing, hey, have you heard, man? Proposition 19 won. Everything's cool, man.
The official word from the marijuana reform movement echoes, if not precisely, that cheeky optimism. Even now, I'm told, stakeholders are meeting; Dale Sky Jones of the 19 campaign tells me she's hearing from state legislators who are willing to come on board, and she's ready and planning to sit down with all the proposition's friends and enemies public and private and figure out the right places and means to shift gears, adjust around the edges, and come back and win, either through initiative or legislation. (Colorado or Nevada or any other Western state with 50 percent or more polled support for legalization are in active play for legalization activists, in addition to a second try in California.)
From all across the drug policy spectrum I hear about the substantial progress 19's campaign represents, never mind the electoral loss. This includes the highest vote total of any statewide legalization measure ever; a new coalition including labor and civil rights groups, not just the usual drug policy suspects; and substantial five and six-figure donors entering the big-money fight for drug law reform for the first time.
In thinking about the politics moving forward, it's worth remembering that first out of the gate to crow over the defeat of Prop. 19 was, of course, President Obama's drug czar Gil Kerlikowske. It is true that pot law reform is a Democratic issue in the sense that voters who identify as Democratic are more likely to support it. But it is not a Democratic issue in the sense that Democratic politicians support it.
Focusing only on the politics and policies and votes surrounding marijuana these days, it's easy to forget it's really all about that age old game of cops and crooks—or in the case of this victimless crime, of cops and victims. At the Margolin bash, I was reminded of this by Stephanie Landa, a friendly, quiet, dignified woman in her 60s.
Landa spent years in jail and is still on probation for growing for the medical market in San Francisco. Landa is a heroine and martyr in the medical community. Yet many in that community, and even more the growers in Northern California's "Emerald Triangle" who feed that market (California's most legendarily marijuana-associated counties, the growing lands of Humboldt and Mendocino, both voted against 19), were afraid of Proposition 19 upsetting a status quo they were comfortable with, or were making money in.
For Landa the issue was far simpler than speculating about who might come out ahead or behind in some hypothetical big market in legal pot. "I just don't want anybody to go to prison anymore" for the sale or ownership of this plant, she says.
And what about the people who might be sending someone to prison? Stephen Downing of LEAP, a 20-year Los Angeles police veteran who went from patrol car to deputy chief, diligently promoted Prop. 19 in public events. (LEAP was a key component of 19's messaging from the beginning. As one 19 strategist said, the campaign deliberately put forward mothers, police, and policy professionals while "keeping rastaman in the basement" to help shift public perception about who cared about legalization, and why.) At the post-election press conference, Downing exhibited the conscience of a lawman who knows as Landa does, from the other side, exactly how useless and destructive the cop and victim game is when it comes to marijuana.
Because of the Prop. 19 campaign, Downing said, "the word 'legalization' has become acceptable and normal. This change requires compassion and enlightened self-interest, and I will personally educate as many police organizations, law enforcement unions, law enforcement interest groups, as I can so more and more working law enforcement professionals come on board: out of compassion for their fellow man and enlightened self-interest in how ending prohibition will make them more effective in providing a safer community, for these people sworn to protect and serve."
Senior Editor Brian Doherty is author of This is Burning Man (BenBella), Radicals for Capitalism (PublicAffairs) and Gun Control on Trial (Cato Institute).
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
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Smokin' dope is the most important thing to a libertarian
Wrong. Though not being victim of the state's war on people via SWAT raids, puppycide and imprisonment for smoking a fucking plant are pretty goddamn high.
I'm not gonna lie, my passion for drugs is the main reason I'm a libertarian.
Maybe they can write a better law next time. I was for prop 19, but jeebus, give every municipality in California the right to tax it?
Back to the drawing boards guys.
Technical question: will reason.com articles have two separate comment pages now, one for themselves and one at H&R?
Heretic! Taxes and heavy-handed regulation are a proper trade-off for our constitutional right to be left alone!
Yeah man, being imprisoned is so much fucking better then being stolen from via taxes.
Good is less than perfect, so we settle for tyranny?
How long has this legalization thing been "just around the corner"?*
*I am boycotting clicking to the half sentence on page 2.
According to the respected Gallup organization, legalization is approaching majority opinion?which it never did in the supposedly licentious 1970s.
Always approaching, never getting there. It reminds me of a geometric shape with an interesting name . . .
Wheeeew, for a second there I was afraid you were going to give us some details about what you do to John that we didn't really need to know.
That would be an asymptotic curve.
Wrong. Though not being victim of the state's war on people via SWAT raids, puppycide and imprisonment for smoking a fucking plant are pretty goddamn high!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Technical question: will reason.com articles have two separate comment pages now, one for themselves and one at H&R?
(Dang! I didn't mean to post it as a reply.)
A lawyer friend of mine once commented to me that if marijuana were legalized he'd probably quit drinking. Maybe the major breweries and distilleries donated to the NO ON 19 camp.
It's not legal and I have pretty much quit drinking!
A CNN poll shows, disturbingly, that voters who think of themselves as the most anti-government were more likely to be against getting the government out of harassing, fining, and arresting people for growing, selling, and using the sweet leaf.
Actually, it shows that they opposed Prop 19, which wouldn't have stopped any of those things. I won't give them credit for knowing that?because voters who say they're "anti-government" are dipshits?but they might, sort of.
Do you think a proposition that repealed marijuana laws, rather than proliferating them in a way White People Like, would fail with the crackaz? I don't.
But states can't repeal federal law.
Having attended several pre-election meetings and parties in the Bay Area to discuss ballot propositions, I was surprised to learn how many otherwise liberal progressive Democrats planned to vote NO on Prop 19.
The recurring themes and reasons for opposition among these groups were: 1) the official Democratic Party position was NO; and 2) a strong aversion to bucking federal government power.
It seems that this group is loathe to either go against the Party line or be a trailblazer for states' rights.
What a bunch of communist pussies. But I guess we already knew that.
Yep. Pot should be legalized.
Hmmm...it's not as much fun when I agree with you guys.
But it sure is a lot less stupid.
+1
Has Reason been reduced to including a picture of a woman's chest in order to create interest in yet another Prop. 19 story?
Should be mandatory for all stories.
I'm a woman, and the most interesting thing to me about the shirt is the font. I like it a lot. I might like to have a tee like that, because of the font. Too bad the proposition lost - wearing the shirt would be a bring down now.
Oh, the font. I thought you wrote "front". That's the part that was most interesting to me.
Font? There's writing on that shirt?!
Of course there is. I read it over and over again.
This is actually what confused me about the shirt. It's written using characters from the Cyrillic alphabet, which (since it's Russian alphabet) is often used when trying to show a connection to communism. Are the makers of the shirt trying to say that Prop 19 is communist?
Yay! I no longer can spread douchebagery on the TV.
Not unlike cheesecake, this is both satisfying (Olberdouche actually got suspended indefinitely) and rich. (Because MSNBC is trying to maintain the appearance of 'balance')
If Olbermann wants to donate to Democrats, or Sean Hannity to Republicans, I don't see why their respective employers should try to stop them. MSNBC and Fox News make no secret about being the Ministries of Propaganda for each party. Fair and balanced my ass.
Brian,
Ever hear of that thing called a "contract"?
No body gives a shit what a third party thinks of a contract two parties signed.
Yeah, actually I have. I do contract jobs all the time. I was simply making an observation. A lot of you people need to go do needlepoint with the rest of the sour old women If you can't have an intelligent conversation here.
Yet many in that community, and even more the growers in Northern California's "Emerald Triangle" who feed that market (California's most legendarily marijuana-associated counties, the growing lands of Humboldt and Mendocino, both voted against 19), were afraid of Proposition 19 upsetting a status quo they were comfortable with, or were making money in.
Does anyone have data on the numbers of Mexican/Hispanic immigrants who voted against Prop 19?
Not enough of them voted 'Si', that's for sure.
Good one....
So ?
What would immigrants have to do with the hippie growers protecting their turf?
Many of them finance their move to the US by acting as "pack mules" for the drug cartels, don't they?
Isn't that what the phrase "The flow of drugs across the border" is talking about?
immigrants most of whom are non western have religious and cultural objections to marijuana and drug use and other things that white hippie dippie types like, like gay marriage.
How the clash between these two groups works out in the future is going to be fascinating to witness. the first group will win, of that I have no doubt. Their values will survive and flourish. the hippie dippie values will vanish.
Marijauna is the most dangerous drug known to man.It turned Amanda Knox,a nice,normal college girl into a satanic sex-crazed killer.
2 out of 3 aint bad, though..
That's a thousand times better than Amanda Knox being turned into a fat disgusting vomit machine who would be awful at sex by drinking a lot of booze.
Marijuana: Hey, it's not a meth addiction!
Contrary to the propaganda put out by the AD Council.
Bob, your statement "Marijauna is the most dangerous drug known to man." is completely untrue.
Even if it were dangerous - and there are ample studies showing that it is not - the words "most dangerous" are complete falsehoods.
If you really do believe in what you say, then you would be more persuasive without such hyperbole.
Is there another side to this debate? Or are some professional libertarians ? like so many socialists - just obsessed with legalizing marijuana? Perhaps they just like banning bans, my guess. The again, some "free minds" (irony alert!) like to ban contrary opinions. Time to move on baby boomers. The science is not on your side. There are bigger issues ? like slavery and forced abortions.
There are other reasons why Californians didn't legalize pot:
1. They already hate tobacco. 2. They hate fast food. 3. They hate gambling. 4. They hate big and small business.
You can more about that here:
http://politicallyincorrectlib.....7/why-didn't-californians-legalize-pot-they-don't-like-freedom/
it's not a matter of when,it's a matter of how
California officially sucks monkey cock.
The dumbutt has spoken!
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How could they?! Don't they know that Marijuana is NOT addicting in any way? Besides no one would attempt to steal it and it's not a gateway drug!
Where do I get my info? Oh the Hippy Liberal who does drugs in Portland. yeah he says that there are no ill effects from smoking it...I heard he DOed...Oh well!
Man it's not like the Drug cartels would use the legalization of Marijuana to push their other drugs, no way it's not possible.
On the same note smoking Marijuana doesn't give you a high or damage your brain. In fact it makes you more aware and smarter!
Paid for by Hippies for Socialism.
I went and looked at the Miron article linked where he says 'employers could only discipline marijuana use that "actually impairs job performance." That is a much higher bar than required by current policy.'
I'm from Denmark and, well, my question is: can an employer really choose to say "sorry, man, but I've got reports that you drank beer this weekend, so I'm gonna have to fire you for using that drug because our company policy doesn't allow it"?
Or does the part in Prop. 19 mean that *smoking pot on the job* would be allowed as long as it doesn't "actually impairs job performance"? (In which case opposition to it would be much more understandable)
I will tread carefully on this subject. I got the crap kicked out of me on another "Reason" article string for suggesting that I understood why newspapers and municipalities were campaigning against this proposition, that politics had little to do with support or opposition, that fear of unintended consequences, i.e., more intoxication-related driving accidents and deaths may be a concern. For stating an opinion and not endorsement for or against the proposition, the so-called libertarians on this site resorted to name calling. Freedom of speech and opinion better apply to all or it will apply to none, and if that's the desired outcome, then many of you are no better than right wing Fascists or left wing Marxists.
I've read the bill, I thought it would pass. Honestly I doubt that not having the bill passed will reduce usage or change people's attitudes. If the bill had passed, certainly the government would have gotten into telling folks when and how they could use ? is that any better? When has having the government regulate any activity made us more free? Maybe, some folks think the tax revenue would be a positive - I disagree. Giving the government more revenue means that they will find ways to spend it ? that usually translates to oppressive intrusions into people's lives. Or even worse the money will be spent on worthless politically motivated activities such as bailing out Union pension plans.
I'd rather just see an effort to de-criminalize use.
I personally do not smoke but I sure believe in liberty. One of the main reasons I hated to see prop 19 fail this time is because if it passed it may have forced Cali to become an unlikely ally of Va., Missouri, and others in the coming battle of Nullification
http://confederateunderground......s-for.html
Any argument that says the state will collect more taxes is not a big selling point in today's political climate.
Better arguments would be:
You don't have to pay for arresting, trying, and jailing users.
Your dope money won't be going to support violent criminal cartels.
You can grow it yourself or buy it for a tiny fraction of what you are paying now, and you don't have to worry about being murdered or robbed by the criminal you're buying it from.
There is no cause for optimism in regard to marijuana legalization. Future marijuana legalization in some states will mean nothing because the federal government has proved that it will arrest those who grow, distribute, or use marijuana for medical or recreational purposes regardless of state laws. Since a solid majority of Americans support continued federal criminalization of marijuana, it will remain illegal for many years.
Bilderberger influenceTO THE WEAK-KNEED REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRAT?..TO ALL THE COMMUNIST IN THE IG,FBI,CIA,AND U.S. Senators and the left wing media outlets?..Wake up america!!!! This goverment is the most corrupt we have had in years. The good old boy network is very much in charge.Mr. obama and pelosi are the puppet masters.How many of their good friends benefited by the agreement " what a farce. All of the u.sSenators voted for this. I am ashamed to say I voted for the these corupted self serving politicians.With good reason they picked an out of towner to be president.All u.s departments need an overhaul. We need to rid ourselves of the puppet masters and the dept heads that bow down to obama and pelosi.I am sick of the lip service I have been getting from these dummies over violations, their friends are getting away with.in the goverment . Barack Hussein Obama , threatens friends and bows to Mmslim.
INPEACH OBAMA ,GOD OPEN YOUR EYES.///For us there are only two possiblities: either we remain american or we come under the thumb of the communist Mmslim Barack Hussein OBAMA. This latter must not occur.//////// I love communist obama.will you ,thank you,the commander.ps aka red ink obama.//////// Repost this if you agree, IS communist obama ONE , Because of its secrecy and refusal to issue news releases, the Bilderberg group is frequently accused of political conspiracies. This outlook has been popular on both extremes of the ideological spectrum, even if they disagree on what the group wants to do. Left-wingers accuse the Bilderberg group of conspiring to impose capitalist domination,[21] while some right-wing groups such as the John Birch Society have accused the group of conspiring to impose a world government and planned economy.Obama's India trip really an Emergency Bilderberger Meeting ?THE COMMADER //////// .Is Barack Obama pushing forward dangerous policies that are bringing the United States closer to a socialist dictatorship. Are you even aware?
2. What is the major proof of the Bilderberger influence over many of the world events in the last decade!
3. Is it really true that the recent global financial collapse was engineered by the Bilderberg Group. Why was their 2010 annual meeting held in Greece?
4. Bilderberger influence,president George W. Bush says he was "blindsided" by the financial crisis that shadowed his final months in office, but adds that the Democratic-controlled Congress shares some of the blame. -
Now that the agenda for global government and a centralized world economic system is public and out in the open, the importance of the Bilderberg Group's annual conference rests on grooming political candidates. The lion's share of Bilderberg's 2010 agenda has already been announced by its members weeks before ? it will revolve around a potential military strike on Iran as well as the future collapse of the euro.The Bilderberger group, whose policies would pave the way for global communist conquest.
----- Bilderberg group in United States-------
George W. Ball (1954, 1993),[13] Under Secretary of State 1961-1968, Ambassador to U.N. 1968
Sandy Berger (1999),[14] National Security Advisor, 1997?2001
Timothy Geithner(2009),[15] Treasury Secretary
Lee H. Hamilton (1997),[1] former US Congressman
Christian Herter,[16] (1961, 1963, 1964, 1966), 53rd United States Secretary of State
Charles Douglas Jackson (1957, 1958, 1960),[17] Special Assistant to the President
Joseph E. Johnson[18] (1954), President Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
Henry Kissinger[19] (1957, 1964, 1966, 1971, 1973, 1974, 1977, 2008),[20] 56th United States Secretary of State
Colin Powell (1997),[1] 65th United States Secretary of State
Lawrence Summers,[15] Director of the National Economic Council
Paul Volcker,[15] Chair of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board and Chairman of the Federal Reserve from 1979?1987
Roger Altman (2009),[15] Deputy Treasury Secretary from 1993?1994, Founder and Chairman of Evercore Partners
[edit] Presidents
Bill Clinton (1991),[21][22] President 1993-2001
Gerald Ford (1964, 1966),[4][23] President 1974-1977
[edit] Senators
John Edwards (2004),[24][25] Senator from North Carolina 1999-2005
Chuck Hagel (1999, 2000),[26] Senator from Nebraska 1997-2009
Sam Nunn (1996, 1997),[1] Senator from Georgia 1972-1997
[edit] Governors
Rick Perry (2007),[27] Governor of Texas 2000-current
Mark Sanford (2008),[28] Governor of South Carolina , the United States closer to a socialist dictatorship. Are you even aware? === The Bilderberg Group, Bilderberg conference, or Bilderberg Club is an annual, unofficial, invitation-only conference of around 130 guests, most of whom are people of influence in the fields of politics, banking, business, the military and media. The conferences are closed to the public.== The Bilderberg Group in which he accuses them of manipulating the public "to install a world government that knows no borders and is not accountable to anyone but its own self."
Repost this if you agree,
Just look at Amsterdam, the population is so relaxed, very little crime, very little accidents and the gov is making money instead of the drug dealers
THANK YOU TO ALL VETERANS , THE COMMANDER ------NOV.11 ,2010
good topic
Sometime in the prior week (before November 20, 2010) the Prop. 19 vote tally passed the point of no return. At 53%-46% in favor of "NO," it is now impossible for Prop. 19 to win, even if "YES" was marked on all of the 600K+ unprocessed ballots remaining after the most recent update yesterday. All that is left to be determined is the actual margin of loss: currently 7%, but it could narrow before the reports must be certified on December 10.
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The fact that this even made it on the ballot shows the progression in thinking. It won't be much longer before this issue resurfaces with a different outcome.
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The fact that this even made it on the ballot shows the progression in thinking. It won't be much longer before this issue resurfaces with a different outcome.
The Bilderberg Group, Bilderberg conference, or Bilderberg Club is an annual, unofficial, invitation-only conference of around 130 guests, most of whom are people of influence in the fields of politics, banking, business, the military and media.
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