
Happy Holidays!
thoughts on the process and product of political organizing, amateur musings on economics, galleries of adorable animal pictures, and informal discussion of whatever other nerdy things come to mind
I can't say that I blame him. I don't think the responses were horrible, but I was hoping that this time around we wouldn't have to grade our President on a curve.The Obama staff bothered to answer just five questions: two of them in a sentence apiece, none of them in more than a single paragraph.
To just one of the top questions on drug policy - the one on legalizing marijuana - the response came without argument:
Q: "Will you consider legalizing marijuana so that the government can regulate it, tax it, put age limits on it, and create millions of new jobs and create a billion dollar industry right here in the U.S.?" S. Man, Denton
A: President-elect Obama is not in favor of the legalization of marijuana.
Big whoop. Wow, those Transition policy and website staffers really had to do some heavy lifting to craft that original phrase! Where did they come up with such fine policy prose? (Maybe they got the rocket-scientist-cum-energy-secretary to pen that one?)
He is the Fat Man. He is the Fat Man After Dark. Created in a genetics laboratory from the splicing of the DNA of William Howard Taft, Grover Cleveland, Henry VIII, Mama Celeste, Mrs. Fields, and and Betty Crocker, the Fat Man first came to prominence as an internet radio host. His first show, aired as a one-time special on a politically progressive internet radio station in the winter of 2006, would set the e-world by storm. Unfortunately the Fat Man's brand of humor and controversial remarks by some of his guests would keep him offline for several months before finally finding his home on another station. On his return show, one of FMAD's friends in China emailed in as he was listening. Fat Man After Dark had defeated communism.