Posted on 09/13/2007 9:02:42 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Last week the Republicans had another debate, this one on FOX News. Not much has changed in the last few months; Rudy Giuliani is still in the lead in the polls and Fred Thompson is still in second despite the fact he didn't announce his intentions to run until a few days ago. What has changed, and changed for the worse, is the surging popularity of a Texas Congressman by the name of Ron Paul. I've been running into normal, intelligent people who support Paul, and it really scares me.
The reason Paul is as popular as he is has to do largely with his sudden support from Democrats and I have to admit, when I didn't know much about him I thought he sounded like a good candidate. He wants to end the Iraq war, have tighter borders, lower taxes and decrease spending, what's not to like? The problem doesn't lie with his policies and ideas, but rather his execution of said policies. How to end the war in Iraq: immediate pullout not only from Iraq, but from the whole of the Middle East. Never mind the slaughter that will occur with our exit. Paul, by the way, denies that this will happen, as the people saying it will are the same that said it would be an easy win. It was a mistake and we never should have been there.
He has more than one unworkable policy. Who else here wants to abolish the FDA? Dr. Paul is your man. His case against the FDA is that they take taxpayer money and are supposed to regulate the food and drugs coming into the country and those produced here, but there are still cases that get by them. Obviously, he claims, we would be better off with no Federal regulation. Corporations should police themselves. Paul is a big fan of the free market and wants to see an end of just about every federal agency that does anything useful or helpful. DEA? Gone. Medicare/Medicaid? History. IRS? The government has no right to take your money.
Paul is such a fan of the free market and letting businesses do whatever they want that during a recent session of Congress he was the one dissenting vote when Congress decided to stop giving tax money to corporations profiting from the genocide in Sudan. It seems pretty cut and dry, companies are making money off of a genocide. Why would you give them money to keep doing that? Paul's answer: We shouldn't tie the hands of corporations by limiting their business dealings. That pretty much covers foreign policy for Paul.
Paul doesn't like the federal tax system and actually signed a document circulated by the National Libertarian Organization a few years ago affirming this belief. Lower taxes is one of the tried and true methods of getting people to vote for you. The problem with Paul saying he'll get lower taxes is that it's not entirely true. Yes, your income will be less taxed, but Paul wants to raise the sales tax to 23 percent at the least. Have fun being poor, because you won't be able to afford anything under Paul's administration. What would be really interesting is seeing how much price gouging we would see with no regulatory bodies, but I'd rather not think about it.
More interesting is Paul's absolute belief in the free market. He wants to see an end of public service agencies and governmental controls. Private post offices, for example, would be bought up by companies and if you're not served by the same post office as say, the people sending you bills, you might never get the bill. Or you might incur a fee when you get the bill. Imagine all roads in the country being up for sale: Paul sees a future where this has happened and thousands of toll booths are being constructed across the country.
We wouldn't have a nutcase presidential candidate without him being a racist, not these days anyways. Paul luckily fits that bill. He's made his case against the African American community known very well, starting with this comment back in 1992, "If you have ever been robbed by a black teen-aged male, you know how unbelievably fleet-footed they can be." Later he would say the age to be prosecuted as an adult should be lowered to 13 because "black males age 13 who have been raised on the streets and who have joined criminal gangs are as big, strong, tough, scary and culpable as any adult and should be treated as such." It's no wonder White Supremacist Website and forum Stormfront.org has come out in support of Paul, as has former Ku Klux Klan member and politician David Duke.
Here's a list of things Paul wants to end because they have had failures in the past, or he sees them as useless: CIA, FBI, Department of Homeland Security, FDA, IRS, Medicare, FBI, DEA, UN, NATO, NAFTA and CAFTA. That's the short list. This is my biggest problem with Ron Paul. He offers no constructive thoughts, only destructive ones. He doesn't think a single thing can be made to work if it failed even once. Bad intelligence? Cut it out completely, don't try to reform it.
Overall, Paul has no workable ideas. He wants to return to a gold standard, which would destroy the US economy. He wants to cut nearly every government department and build a giant wall (not a fence) on our border with Mexico. I honestly don't understand how people can think he would make a good president.
...Or instituting a liberal democracy in Iraq.
I have to take exception to your statement that he wants to "disengage the world". His views are often mislabeled as "isolationist". The correct term is "non-interventionist". He wants to engage the world by having diplomatic relations with, and trading with, as many countries as possible.
Congressman Paul's viewpoint is the result of a lot of study in this area, and I can't do it justice in a Free Republic post, so I recommend listening to his recent foreign policy speech at Johns Hopkins University. It's quite compelling, and he lays his case out in a way that is not allowed for in the debates or on talk shows.
I know you're not really a troll in the sense of a lib interloper, but it still is primarily a Ron Paul thread, after all.
Sorry, I mistook you for someone who might be willing to learn.
And I mistook you as well
Is not! (supported by evidence)
Is too! (supported by nothing)
Is not! (supported by evidence)
Is too! (supported by nothing)
You have really elevated the level of discourse in this thread. I can only wonder why you took the time to respond. You aren’t trying to argue anything, you are just trying to inject your opinion. Mission accomplished. Now if you don’t have anything to add to the discussion, I recommend you bug off.
Sometimes thats the way life is.
Piss off yerself.
;0)
Look, I gave you a link to Congressman Paul's speech. If you want to learn, give it a listen. If not, hey, do what you like.
BTW, That is Mr Paul's contribution in all of this. He has elevated the discourse.
I didnt bother to look.
Deal with it
Ron Paul is an idealistic yahoo.
Politics encompasses all the people.
Some times you need to smack folks up side the head
John Derbyshire wrote a pretty good article for NRO titled "That Old-Time Religion" that said the same thing you did.
Go on, admit it: you have felt the Ron Paul temptation, havent you? And its not just the thrill of imagining another president named Ron, is it? Ron Paul believes a lot of what you believe, and what I believe. You dont imagine hes going to be the 44th POTUS, but you kind of hope he does well none the less.And why not? Look at those policy positions! Abolish the IRS and Federal Reserve; balance the budget; go back to the gold standard; pull out of the U.N. and NATO; end the War on Drugs; overturn Roe v. Wade; repeal federal restrictions on gun ownership; fence the borders; deport illegals; stop lecturing foreign governments about human rights; let the Middle East go hang. Whats not to like?
We-e-ell. We all have nits to pick, though we wouldnt all pick the same ones. The gold standard? Wasnt it going off the gold standard that gave us full control over the wilder swings of the business cycle? Which was, like, a good idea? I am by no means as willing to surrender to the collective wisdom of modern economists as Bryan Caplan wants me to be, but the gold standard? Come on. And stopping the War on Drugs? Where would that take us? Philip Morris brands of crack cocaine available over the counter at Walgreens? You pick your own nits.
Thats not the point, though. Nits aside, the broad outlook there is conservative in a way we dont often see from a presidential candidate. It is, in fact, conservatism of exceptional purity. Reading through those policy positions, an American conservative can hear the mystic chords of memory sounding in the distance, and hear the call of ancestral voices wafted on the breeze: Hayek, von Mises, Rothbart, Nock, Kirk, John Chamberlain... Unlike the product in that automobile commercial, this is your fathers conservatism the Old-Time Religion. What is there among Ron Pauls policy prescriptions that the young William F. Buckley would have disagreed with?
You mean that sometimes you feel that you have the right to force others to believe exactly like you do.
In fact, Congressman Paul did that at the very beginning. I believe it was about the time the AUMF was being debated. His fellow Congressmen acted as if the idea was ridiculous.
LoL That seems to be your realm
The mouth foamers spend their time on most threads saying that Ron Paul is a RINO, that he's not a real conservative, that he only appeals to moonbat, moveon.org lefties.
Now we find out that Ron Paul sucks because he's so pro-constitution, and socialism is great. On Free Republic. It's all a bit surreal.
So much for Paul being a coward who won't fight back.
OK, I understand your point now. No offense taken.
FYI, Since Ken was nice enough to prepare the picture at my request, I thought it appropriate to thank him. Don’t you like the picture of Ron Paul with a pancake on his head? Before you respond, remember I’m very sensitive to criticism.
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