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View Full Version : Candidate Joe Biden D


chicom
04-03-2007, 01:28 PM
Platform:

http://www.joebiden.com/home/

chicom
04-07-2007, 06:54 PM
Foriegn Policy-F- cut and run
Domestic Policy-C-Talks jobs and health car and alternative energy and education
Economy-D-crickets, talks about spending money
Taxes-D- He's a Dim no brainer
Civil Rights-D- everything is described as crime fighting
Immigration-D-crickets
Trade-D- all he talks abou are energy and healthcare
Sovereignty-D-crickets
Defense-D-redeploy to Darfur
Monetary Policy-D-crickets
Budget-D-Hand out a degree to anyone with a heartbeat, then make sure they see a doctor


He talks alternative fuel like ethanol, but if all the farmers are growing fuel, who is going to grow the food?

He is big on education, no bad there, but teachers in my eyes are public servants. You do not enter public service with aims of being a millionaire, should've picked the private sector.

He has a watered down Hilliarycare plan and wants to strengthen DHS to the point of a camera on every block and a cop on your front stoop.
So let's go after the citizens rather than the real threat.


Edit* Digging up the dirt. He is all about education but he liked the shortcut method when he was in.

* Biden was forced to withdraw from the 1988 Democratic Presidential nominations when it was alleged that he had failed a 1965 introductory law school course on legal methodology due to plagiarism. "Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr., fighting to salvage his Presidential campaign . . . acknowledged 'a mistake' in his youth, when he plagiarized a law review article for a paper he wrote in his first year at law school. Mr. Biden insisted, however, that he had done nothing 'malevolent,' that he had simply misunderstood the need to cite sources carefully." [34] Biden withdrew from the race September 23, 1987, and reported the law school incident to the Delaware Supreme Court. The court's Board of Professional Responsibility cleared him of any allegations. [35]
* Biden was also accused of plagiarizing portions of his speeches, and that he had copied several campaign speeches, notably those of British Labour leader Neil Kinnock and Senator Robert F. Kennedy. He denied those charges. "And he asserted that another controversy, concerning recent reports of his using material from others' speeches without attribution, was 'much ado about nothing.'" [36]