Home News Weather Finance Travel Maps Movies Lottery Horoscopes Games
 SECTION: PARTY POLITICS & ELECTIONEERING
Search The Web:
DOMAIN NAMES
AS LOW AS $2.99 / YR.
Top Obama YouTube Questions: Legalize Pot
Thursday, 27-Jan-2011 4:14AM United Press International
USTINET NEWS

 » Front Page

 » Top Stories

 » U.S.

 » World

 » Politics

 » Business

 » Sports

 » Health

 » Tech/Science

 » Living/Entertainment

 » Off Beat Stories

 » News Photos

 » Weather


Special Editions

 » Iraq & Conflict

 » Israel/Palestine

 » Crimes & Laws


MultiMedia

 » Interactive Features

 » News Photos


POLL: Your Opinion

 » What Do You Think




WASHINGTON, Jan. 27 (UPI) -- The top questions Americans want to ask U.S. President Barack Obama on YouTube Thursday deal with legalizing marijuana, a review of the questions indicated.

SAVE MONEY ON TRAVEL DEALS

Obama is scheduled to answer questions on the video-sharing Web site starting at 2:30 p.m. EST in a live-streamed interview with YouTube news and politics head Steve Grove, formerly an ABC News and Boston Globe reporter.

The session is part of a two-day campaign to talk directly to Americans after the State of the Union speech. Obama spoke and joked with Wisconsin factory workers Wednesday in a visit intended to expand on his State of the Union's "winning the future" theme.

The YouTube questions Obama will answer will be based on the number of votes each question receives, YouTube said.

More than 193,000 people submitted nearly 140,000 questions and cast almost 1.4 million votes by midnight Wednesday, the submission deadline, a United Press International review indicated. This is 10 times last year's 14,000 questions, the first year YouTube hosted an Obama interview.

The top 10 questions all involved ending or changing the government's war on drugs, legalizing or decriminalizing marijuana and embracing industrial hemp as a "green" initiative to help farmers, the UPI review found.

The United States is hemp's biggest importer. China is hemp's leading producer. The U.S. government does not consistently distinguish between psychoactive marijuana and the non-psychoactive cannabis used in industrial hemp.

Along with Obama's interview, U.S. Vice President Joe Biden will answer questions from the public in a Yahoo interview, and four top administration officials will answer questions submitted through the Facebook social-network service. The White House will also sponsor online "policy roundtables" Thursday to discuss the economy, foreign policy, education and healthcare.

The economy roundtable will be hosted by Council of Economic Advisers Chairman Austan Goolsbee, foreign policy by Deputy National Security Adviser Denis McDonough, education by Education Secretary Arne Duncan and healthcare by Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, the White House said.

The White House's social-media push comes as the Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life Project reported Thursday Obama and other Democrats lost their Internet edge to Republicans, independents and Tea Party movement supporters in the past two years.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Related News Topics:

Agriculture, fishing, forestry
Other crimes
Thefts and robberies
Party politics and electioneering
Top U.S. news
News of alcohol and drugs, use and abuse
Freedom, civil rights, human rights
Police officers, prisons, law enforcement
Satellites, telecommunications
News covering industry
News of crimes
Corruption, assaults, theft
Party politics and electioneering
Social issues
Miscellaneous social issues
Satellites, telecommunications

 BREAKING STORIES

EU envoy: Political uproar threatens Haiti

Thousands protest on 'Angry Friday'

Egypt cuts access to Internet

British unions discuss strategy

Schumer says GOP would privatize SoSec

Romney leads 2012 Michigan GOP poll

Obama's Irish heritage celebrated

Kim named son reluctantly, brother says

Pence: No presidential bid in 2012

Sharron Angle to run for president?

Violent protests continue to grip Egypt

ANC appeals for calm over Mandela's health

Rep. Ron Paul mulls Senate bid

Yemenis protest against government

Top Obama YouTube questions: Legalize pot

Tunisia seeks arrest of ex-president

Karzai inaugurates Parliament

U.S. offers support in Tunisia elections

Libertarians call Obama, GOP hypocrites

Unions: Trade deals can threaten jobs

Home News Weather Finance Travel Maps Movies Lottery Horoscopes Games
Home :: My Page :: My WebMail :: My Calendar :: My Portfolio :: Chat :: Help Center :: Sign In :: Sign Out

MY.USTI.NET PORTAL  -  © 1996 - 2004 USTINET CORPORATION. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Please see our Privacy Policy, Security Guarantee, Terms of Use for additional information.