Anonymous wrote:How did such a 'fine' man get the nomination in the first place? No vetting?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's a shame. His dying constituents are stuck with him a bit longer I guess.
What do you think the implications of his role in this debacle are for his re-election?
Considering his district, the implications should be horrible. My mom has numerous family members who live in the counties he represents and there's a serious opioid problem in that area. That said, I suspect a lot of voters there won't care and will vote for him anyway along party lines. One of my cousins lives in Snyder County, lost a son to an overdose, and has recently posted support for Marino on FB. You cannot make this shit up.
Honestly, do those people even read/watch MSM or liberal media? Did the "conservative" media report on Marino's role in the whole pharma/opiod situation? Or do they just think it's "fake news"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What I would like to know is how he became the Trump administration's top pick for DEA unless this is another in the line of putting the fox in to guard the hens: Scott Pruitt who is in the pocket of oil, gas and the chemical industries, Ryan Zinke who is in the pocket of the extraction industries etc.
So in the upside down world of this administration perhaps it makes sense to put someone who actually helped make the opiod crisis worse in charge of the DEA?
In 2016, Marino was part of a GOP effort to look into whether Hillary Clinton committed perjury when she testified before Congress about her private email server, Fox News reported.
http://insider.foxnews.com/2016/08/16/gop-rep-marino-clintons-are-pathological-liars
Anonymous wrote:What I would like to know is how he became the Trump administration's top pick for DEA unless this is another in the line of putting the fox in to guard the hens: Scott Pruitt who is in the pocket of oil, gas and the chemical industries, Ryan Zinke who is in the pocket of the extraction industries etc.
So in the upside down world of this administration perhaps it makes sense to put someone who actually helped make the opiod crisis worse in charge of the DEA?
Anonymous wrote:What I would like to know is how he became the Trump administration's top pick for DEA unless this is another in the line of putting the fox in to guard the hens: Scott Pruitt who is in the pocket of oil, gas and the chemical industries, Ryan Zinke who is in the pocket of the extraction industries etc.
So in the upside down world of this administration perhaps it makes sense to put someone who actually helped make the opiod crisis worse in charge of the DEA?
Anonymous wrote:What I would like to know is how he became the Trump administration's top pick for DEA unless this is another in the line of putting the fox in to guard the hens: Scott Pruitt who is in the pocket of oil, gas and the chemical industries, Ryan Zinke who is in the pocket of the extraction industries etc.
So in the upside down world of this administration perhaps it makes sense to put someone who actually helped make the opiod crisis worse in charge of the DEA?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's a shame. His dying constituents are stuck with him a bit longer I guess.
What do you think the implications of his role in this debacle are for his re-election?
Considering his district, the implications should be horrible. My mom has numerous family members who live in the counties he represents and there's a serious opioid problem in that area. That said, I suspect a lot of voters there won't care and will vote for him anyway along party lines. One of my cousins lives in Snyder County, lost a son to an overdose, and has recently posted support for Marino on FB. You cannot make this shit up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's a shame. His dying constituents are stuck with him a bit longer I guess.
What do you think the implications of his role in this debacle are for his re-election?
Anonymous wrote:That's a shame. His dying constituents are stuck with him a bit longer I guess.
The congressman's withdrawal comes after a joint CBS "60 Minutes" and Washington Post report revealed that Marino took nearly $100,000 from the pharmaceutical lobby while sponsoring a bill that made it easier for drug companies to distribute opioids across American communities and thwart the Drug Enforcement Agency.
Rep.Tom Marino has informed me that he is withdrawing his name from consideration as drug czar. Tom is a fine man and a great Congressman!