fancyred wrote:
amharican wrote:
If he strikes out a third time he will probably be in prison for life for doing drugs.
lol...this son' of privilage will never get that sentence fancy...do you really believe that? have you been going for late night rides with al the 3rd?...the question i have been getting at and you keep not answering is, are the people that took george and laura to task for their parenting skills going to do the same to al and tipper?

Yeap, just like the Bush girls, right? And I answered you! Bush was the one that has caused the Texas prisons to explode with kids who have drank illigally and used illigal fake ID's. He also installed the three strikes you are in prison for life no matter what the crime is. IT was good for most Texan's but not good for his daughters.

Gore didn't influence his kids crimes by doing what his kids were doing but Bush did. Difference in the parenting skills. Hey, I raised both of my boy's one followed what I taught him, the other didn't. One has a decent job because of his work skills, the other only manages to get by. I raised both of my boys the same, Bush raised both of his girls the same. Seems the Bush girls followed in daddy's footsteps. Gores son didn't follow in daddy's footsteps.

I don't think that Gore will pull strings to get his son off. He didn't the first time. If the Judge decides to send Gores son to prison, my bet is his son will go.

Seems the Bush girls followed in daddy's footsteps. Gores son didn't follow in daddy's footsteps.

YAH RIGHT...lol

Posted by FoM on January 27, 2000 at 10:21:03 PT
E-Mails To The Editor
Source: WorldNet Daily

cannabis In regards to the story that Vice President Al Gore smoked large quantities of marijuana for a number of years, I will shock those who know me by saying that I agree with Mr. Gore. The fact he smoked marijuana in the past is not relevant to his ability or qualification to become president.

What I do believe is relevant, however, is the fact that he supports placing, and does place, over 685,000 people per year in jail for doing exactly what he did, and the only difference is that he didn't get caught until he was the vice president. This is hypocrisy at its worst. According to one congressman, the federal government alone spends in excess of $10 billion per year just prosecuting people who smoke marijuana, and that doesn't include what states, counties, and cities spend. Either Mr. Gore needs to turn himself in and take his punishment like a man like everyone else, or he should repudiate this insane law.

Over half the adult population of the United States admits to having smoked marijuana. Nearly one third of the adult population admits to smoking it regularly at this time. When that many people ignore a law, it breeds disrespect for all law. When it is the president or vice president who has broken the law, no matter when in their life they did it, it makes it that much easier to ignore. And we wonder why kids don't take responsibility for their behavior. With an example like this, who can blame them.

Dr. Richard E. Pearl Sr.


Toking on Hypocrisy's Bong:

In a statement published by Reuters on Jan. 25, 2000, Al Gore addressed allegations that he was a regular marijuana user in his youth (early 20s). During this interview, Gore admitted to the alleged use of marijuana by saying, "When I came back from Vietnam, yes, but not to that extent." The extent to which he was referring was years of daily usage of marijuana, ending only a week before he announced his bid for the House of Representatives in 1976, as is alleged by his one-time friend and next-door neighbor John Warnecke.

Gore then further attempted to minimize the importance of his admitted drug use, saying, "This is something I dealt with a long time ago. It is old news. When I was young I did things young people do. When I grew up, I put away childish things."

I'm sure that many of Gore's supporters will accept his "boys will be boys" attempt to brush this issue aside, but in his particular case, there is a problem: During the time that Al Gore has held the office of vice president of the United States of America, he has had hands-on oversight of a national drug policy which has resulted in record numbers of Americans being incarcerated, a huge percentage of these being convicted of nothing more than non-violent drug offenses.

What has Al Gore to say to the millions of Americans who have been subject to imprisonment, fines, and the loss of their rights to vote, hold jobs in public service, and own firearms while being guilty of little more than the same "childish things" to which Gore readily admits?

Can such hypocrisy be justified? Can Gore and his accomplices in both the Bush and Clinton administrations deny that the "War on Drugs" is actually nothing more than a covert war on the freedoms, civil liberties and private property rights of the citizens of the United States? Or do we now add illegal drug use to the list of crimes such as perjury, obstruction of justice, abuse of office, treason, etc., to which the "New Ruling Elite Class" have declared themselves exempt?

I am sure that the millions of Americans who currently sit in U.S. jails and prisons for the crimes of use, possession, cultivation, or distribution of Al Gore's "childish thing" are anxious to hear his answer.

P.T. Chivers

Wednesday, January 26, 2000
© 1999 WorldNetDaily.com


Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamour, and evil speaking, be put away from you, with all malice:And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as Elohim for Yahushua the Messiah's sake hath forgiven you. Ephesians 4:31-32