There Was Something Missing From The GOP's 'Debate' On Criminal Justice Reform

Does it count as a debate when it's just one person talking?
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The first YouTube question at the GOP debate Thursday night went to Mark Watson, an Army veteran who typically video-blogs about technology. He pressed the candidates on police accountability, specifically wondering why body camera technology continues to lag so far behind the basic capabilities of civilian smartphones.

"As an African-American living near Ferguson, I've seen the strain between police officers and the communities they serve firsthand," Watson said. "Now, there are great tools like body cameras to protect both officers and citizens, but we all currently have better cameras in our pockets than in our precincts. Why aren't we using the technology available to better protect our communities?"

The debate moderators turned to Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul for an answer. Paul, the only GOP candidate who has made racial equality and criminal justice reform asignificant part of his campaign, noted that he'd introduced a bill on body cameras, before quickly pivoting into his stump speech. He spoke about the need to end the racist war on drugs, to reform harsh sentencing schemes and to scale back the system of municipal fines that has victimized citizens in cities like Ferguson, Missouri.

"One thing I discovered in Ferguson was that a third of the budget for the city of Ferguson was being reaped by civil fines," said Paul. "People were just being fined to death."

But he said nothing specific about police or body cameras, which, as Watson noted in his question, have only been adopted by a few major cities in the U.S.

When Paul wrapped up his brief remarks, the moderators tossed to commercial. There was no follow-up or further conversation from the rest of the candidates, who may have actually had something interesting, or at least less predictable, to say on the issue. And thus concluded the evening's debate -- if you can call it that -- on criminal justice reform.

 

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Here's What The 10 Leading GOP Candidates Think Of Climate Change
Donald "It's Cold Outside" Trump(01 of10)
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"It’s snowing & freezing in NYC. What the hell ever happened to global warming?" -- March 2013

“I believe in clean air. Immaculate air. But I don't believe in climate change." -- Sept. 2015

"It's really cold outside, they are calling it a major freeze, weeks ahead of normal. Man, we could use a big fat dose of global warming!" -- Oct. 2015
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Ben "This Always Happens" Carson(02 of10)
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“There’s always going to be either cooling or warming going on. As far as I’m concerned, that’s irrelevant. What is relevant is that we have an obligation and a responsibility to protect our environment." -- Nov. 2014

"Of course there's climate change. Any point in time, temperatures are going up or temperatures are going down. Of course that's happening. When that stops happening, that's when we're in big trouble." -- Sept. 2015
(credit:Erik Kabik Photography/ MediaPunch/MediaPunch/IPx)
Marco "Oh But The Jobs" Rubio(03 of10)
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“We are not going to destroy our economy, make America a harder place to create jobs, in order to pursue a policy that will do nothing, nothing to change our climate, to change our weather." -- Sept. 2015

"America is not a planet." -- Sept. 2015
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Ted "You Climate Blasphemers, You" Cruz(04 of10)
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“If you look at satellite data for the last 18 years, there’s been zero recorded warming. The satellite says it ain’t happening.” -- August 2015

“Climate change is not science. It's religion." -- Oct. 2015
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Jeb "Well Maybe, But I'm A Republican" Bush(05 of10)
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"The climate is changing, whether men are doing it or not." -- June 2015

“I don't think it's the highest priority. I don’t think we should ignore it, either." -- August 2015
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Carly "I Worked With Scientists And They're All Wrong" Fiorina(06 of10)
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"I believe if you're going to go to science, you need to read the fine print. And here's what the scientists say: A single nation acting alone can make no difference at all." -- Sept. 2015

“The only answer to this problem, according to the scientist, is a three-decade global effort, coordinated and costing coordinated effort. It's impossible, are you kidding? A three-decade effort, costing trillions of dollars, coordinated with current technology? It’ll never happen.” -- Sept. 2015
(credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Mike "Um, Kaboom" Huckabee(07 of10)
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"Science is not as settled on that as it is on some things.” -- June 2015

"A volcano in one blast will contribute more than a hundred years of human activity." -- August 2015
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Chris "Sure, But Nah" Christie(08 of10)
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"I think global warming is real. I don't think that's deniable. And I do think human activity contributes to it."* -- May 2015

*But Christie has adamantly opposed New Jersey joining into a multi-state greenhouse gas initiative, calling it "a completely useless plan.” -- Sept. 2014
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John "It's Your Kids' Problem" Kasich(09 of10)
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“We don’t want to destroy people’s jobs, based on some theory that is not proven.” --August 2015

"Do I believe there is something called climate change? I do. Do I think that human beings affect it? I do. How much? Not enough for me to go out and cost somebody their job." -- Oct. 2015
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Rand "Doesn't Really Know" Paul(10 of10)
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"Not conclusive." -- April 2014

"Not sure anybody exactly knows why." -- April 2014

"Alarmist." -- April 2014

"I don't want to shut down all forms of energy such that thousands and thousands of people lose jobs.” -- April 2015
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