< %=imgalt%>
US Elections Calendar ~ Barak Obama ~ Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry ~ Other International News
Home / International News / 2008 / September 2008 / September 6, 2008
Obama tells gun owners they have nothing to fear from Democrats
Sarah Palin

Palin got $30K more for clothes?

Keep hands off my Senate seat: Republican Senator to Palin

Posh decks up in designer wear for kids football practice

More on Sarah Palin

Hillary Clinton

US Senate prepares legal remedy to clear Hillary Clintons nomination

The US Constitution may obstruct Hillary Clintons confirmation as Obamas top diplomat

GOP is finding little to criticise in Obamas team

More on Hillary Clinton

Barack Obama

Obama inauguration: Washingtons Mall to be opened to the public for the first time

US Supreme Court to decide on Obamas citizenship

Obama aide says Mumbai attack was the work of professionals

More on Barack Obama

Top News

Praja Rajyam decides to approach court to vacate the stay on roadshows

Chhagan Bhujbal gets Dy.CMs chair in Maharashtra

US Supreme Court to decide on Obamas citizenship

Gwyneth Paltrow no longer wants to be a movie star

Barbie maker Mattel wins legal battle over MGA Entertainments Bratz doll

Michael Clarkes gift for fiancée Lara Bingle - Aston Martin car

Retention of peoples DNA records by police banned in Europe

Tobacco smoke can trigger behavioural problems in asthmatic boys

Obama tells gun owners they have nothing to fear from Democrats

Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama suggested that people cling to guns because they are bitter, but he is still plagued by questions about his position on gun control.

DURYEA, PA, Sep 6 : Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama suggested that people cling to guns because they are bitter, but he is still plagued by questions about his position on gun control.

"There are rumors going around that . . . you're going to take away our guns," said Joan O'Neil, a resident of tiny Susquehanna in northeastern Pennsylvania, a big-time area for hunting.

This gun issue that Obama has tried to deftly navigate throughout this long campaign and one that damaged him here in his primary fight with Hillary Clinton.

And it's one that could do even him even further harm in the general election, as he is matched against a pro-gun ticket that includes a vice-presidential nominee who has been photographed firing an assault rifle.

And indeed, several of the dozens of plant workers invited to Obama's economic "town hall" here in this town outside of Scranton, Pa. nodded as the question was asked. Pennsylvania has the highest per capita rate of National Rifle Association members in the nation.

"I believe in the Second Amendment, and if you are a law-abiding gun owner you have nothing to fear from an Obama administration," Obama said.

"This has been peddled again and again. Here's what I believe: The Second Amendment is an indvidual right. . . people have the right to bear arms. But I also believe there is nothing wrong with some common-sense gun safety measures."

GOP vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin, now likely the most famous moose-hunter in the country, mocked Obama's stance on guns during her nomination speech Wednesday, when she accused him of talking "one way in Scranton and another way in San Francisco," -- a reference to Obama's now infamous comment about some people in America who "cling to guns or religion."

ANI

December 5, 2008

December 4, 2008

December 3, 2008

December 2, 2008

December 1, 2008

November 30, 2008