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Stan Lippmann, Natural Medicine
 
Candidate: Attorney general
Stan Lippmann
Stan Lippmann
 
Age: 41
 
Residence: Seattle
 
Occupation:
  Attorney
 
Education:
  B.S. in physics, New York University; Ph.D. in physics, Johns Hopkins University; J.D., University of Washington
 
Political history:
  Candidate for mayor of Seattle, 1997; for Congress, 1998; for Seattle City Council, 1999
 
Endorsements: No response
 
Campaign Web site: http://www.rubella.net
 
Campaign theme:
  Stop killing, maiming with mandatory vaccines.
 

 
1.  Do you support the recommendations in the attorney general's privacy report? Please give details.
  The job of attorney general is first and foremost to defend the constitutional rights of the citizens and to uphold the law. My bank account number is 3250707600033886641 and my Social Security number is 056-38-6130. Meanwhile the state continues to get very private with the body politic, forcibly shooting into it mercury and mutant viruses.
 
2.  Would you support a law limiting the amount of damages people could recover from the state? Why or why not?
  No. Christine Gregoire used tens of thousands of taxpayer dollars to hire Preston Gates & Ellis to defend the state against clear wrongdoing by the University of Washington against a student. The scales are thus already heavily tilted in favor of the state.
 
3.  With some states reconsidering the death penalty, what is your position and what changes, if any, do you think are needed in Washington's law? Under what circumstances would you support a moratorium?
  By shooting deadly germs into us, the state is in effect giving many of our totally innocent fellow citizens the death penalty. Anyone who supports mandatory vaccination but opposes the death penalty is a hypocrite. I support such a moratorium for the innocent as well as the guilty.
 
4.  What would you do to improve the Attorney General's office?
  I would work to ensure that catfights among my underlings were not costing the state millions of dollars. I would not be the state's attack dog to fight off legitimate claims, but rather would consider it my highest duty to ensure that citizens were not harmed by misconduct by the state.
 
5.  What do you think the top priority of the office should be?
  As I construe the state Constitution, the rights of the citizens to control what and what does not go into their bodies is fundamental. Thus, I would work to stop mandatory vaccination and, conversely, to suspend the failed War on Drugs.

 


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