News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Obama Owned Up To 'Drug Mistakes' |
Title: | US: Obama Owned Up To 'Drug Mistakes' |
Published On: | 2007-02-12 |
Source: | Belfast Telegraph (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 15:38:58 |
OBAMA OWNED UP TO 'DRUG MISTAKES'
Bill Clinton famously admitted to having smoked marijuana but denied
having ever inhaled. "When I was in England, I experimented with
marijuana a time or two, and I didn't like it," he said. "I didn't
inhale and never tried it again."
His successor, George Bush, while acknowledging a near-alcoholic
past, refused to say whether he had ever taken illegal drugs. In
1999, he said: "I've told the people of this country that, over 20
years ago, I made some mistakes when I was younger. I've learnt from
those mistakes."
But a generation later there seems to be less bashfulness about the
topic and controlling the message appears to be the key.
Barack Obama, the Democratic senator who has formally announced his
bid to become America's first black president, long ago admitted
taking both cannabis and cocaine while he was a teenager. In a 1995
memoir, Dreams From My Father, he wrote: "Pot had helped,
and booze; maybe a little blow when you could afford it. Not smack
[heroin] though."
Mr Obama has also stressed his activities were part of a youthful
behaviour he has long left behind and which he does not condone. In
an interview with The State Journal-Register newspaper of
Springfield, Illinois, he said: "I was a confused kid and was making
a bunch of negative choices based on stereotypes of what I
thought a tough young man should be. Those choices were misguided,
a serious mistake. Growing up to be a man involves taking
responsibility. By the time I was 20, I was no longer engaged in any
of this stuff."
Bill Clinton famously admitted to having smoked marijuana but denied
having ever inhaled. "When I was in England, I experimented with
marijuana a time or two, and I didn't like it," he said. "I didn't
inhale and never tried it again."
His successor, George Bush, while acknowledging a near-alcoholic
past, refused to say whether he had ever taken illegal drugs. In
1999, he said: "I've told the people of this country that, over 20
years ago, I made some mistakes when I was younger. I've learnt from
those mistakes."
But a generation later there seems to be less bashfulness about the
topic and controlling the message appears to be the key.
Barack Obama, the Democratic senator who has formally announced his
bid to become America's first black president, long ago admitted
taking both cannabis and cocaine while he was a teenager. In a 1995
memoir, Dreams From My Father, he wrote: "Pot had helped,
and booze; maybe a little blow when you could afford it. Not smack
[heroin] though."
Mr Obama has also stressed his activities were part of a youthful
behaviour he has long left behind and which he does not condone. In
an interview with The State Journal-Register newspaper of
Springfield, Illinois, he said: "I was a confused kid and was making
a bunch of negative choices based on stereotypes of what I
thought a tough young man should be. Those choices were misguided,
a serious mistake. Growing up to be a man involves taking
responsibility. By the time I was 20, I was no longer engaged in any
of this stuff."
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