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There used to be an organization for people who believed in a truly
limited government — limited taxes, limited spending, limited
interference in individual lives and limited intervention in foreign
affairs. That organization was known as the Republican Party. But the
only one of those beliefs that still motivates the G.O.P. establishment
is limited taxes. In 2008, people who still hold all of them joined the
Ron Paul Revolution.
But now the revolution is ebbing. Congressman Paul's new campaign
finance report shows that he's raised nearly $35 million, including
more than any other Republican candidate in the fourth quarter of 2007,
and he's inspired remarkable passion among the kind of diehards who
hold up campaign signs on highway overpasses and post irate comments on
obscure blogs. But the presidency isn't decided on YouTube or
Technorati. Paul didn't win any Republican primaries, and he recently
conceded that "victory in the conventional sense is not available."
Of course, nothing in Paul's world is ever done in the conventional
sense, so he has refused to drop out of the race and endorse the
presumptive G.O.P. nominee, Senator John McCain. Instead he argues that
all Republicans should have "the right to vote for someone that stands
for traditional Republican principles." And he's got a point.
The real significance of the Paul campaign is not the ubiquitous
bumper stickers and lawn signs or the online fund-raising records ($6
million in one day, plus another $4 million, hilariously, on Guy Fawkes
Day) but the mirror Paul held up to the modern Republican Party. When
his fellow candidates denounced big government, Paul was there to
remind them that President Bush and the G.O.P. Congress had shattered
spending records and exploded the deficit. When they hailed freedom,
Paul asked why they all supported the Patriot Act and other expansions
of executive power. And when they called themselves conservatives, Paul
asked what was so conservative about sending thousands of young
Americans to try to transform the Middle East.
In some ways, Paul is a throwback to the frugal and isolationist
wing of the old Republican Party, the fuddy-duddy GOP of Robert Taft
and Calvin Coolidge. His fiscal policies evoke the idealistic
Republican revolutionaries who seized control of Congress in 1994; he
wants to abolish the IRS, the Departments of Homeland Security,
Education and Energy, and most of the federal government. He refuses to
vote for unbalanced budgets, and he has opposed spending taxpayer
dollars on Congressional Medals of Honor, even for Rosa Parks or Pope
John Paul II. Typically, his campaign has reported no debts, and still
has more than $5 million in the bank. Meanwhile, Paul's foreign
policies evoke candidate George W. Bush's call for a "humbler foreign
policy" in 2000, although Paul goes much further; not only did he
oppose U.S. involvement in Iraq, Kosovo and the war on drugs, he
opposes U.S. involvement in the United Nations and NATO.
Under Bush's leadership, of course, the Republican Party has been
anything but frugal and anything but isolationist. The congressional
Republican revolutionaries seemed to lose their zeal for shrinking the
federal government once they controlled it, which is one reason voters
expelled them from power in 2006. And these days, it's usually
Democrats who call for a humbler foreign policy. Paul's leave-us-alone
libertarianism hasn't fit in with a party anxious to read our e-mail,
improve our values, assert American power abroad and subsidize friendly
industries at home. The party's recent mix of "national greatness"
neoconservatives, evangelical theoconservatives and K Street careerists
has had many goals, but leaving people alone hasn't been one of them.
That's why Paul was the one getting booed at G.O.P. debates. And that's
one reason why Paul's fervent followers were banned from the activist
Republican website RedState.
In fairness, though, another reason RedState's directors got tired
of the Paulistas was that so many of them seemed — what's the polite
word? — nuts. Paul's supporters aren't all black-helicopter paranoiacs,
but the black-helicopter paranoiacs sure do support Ron Paul. The
controversy over a few racist articles in his old newsletters was
probably overblown; there's no evidence that Paul himself was ever a
racist. But he is an extremist — partly in the Barry Goldwater
extremism-in-defense-of-liberty-is-no-vice sense of the word, but also
in the wacky let's-relitigate-the-currency-debates-of-the-1820s sense
of the word. The late William F. Buckley wanted conservatives to stand
athwart history yelling stop; Paul seems to want to slam history into
reverse. The guy genuinely wants to abolish the Federal Reserve and
start circulating gold again.
Still, even if you set aside Paul's kookier ideas, there just
doesn't seem to be a road to the White House for any candidate who
opposes the war in Iraq as well as higher taxes, the war on drugs as
well as higher spending, restrictions on privacy as well as
restrictions on guns. That's a real "freedom agenda," a true assault on
big government, and while it clearly spoke to some angry dudes with
high-speed web connections and time on their hands, it's just as
clearly not where America stands today. Paul didn't have a lot of
company on the House floor when he rose recently to complain about
government overreach in the investigation of the disgraced former New
York governor Eliot Spitzer, who resigned after revelations that he had
been a customer of a high-end prostitution ring.
But even if Paul's ideological purity is never going to get him to
the White House, it does help illuminate the impurities — and sometimes
the hypocrisies — of today's Republicans, just as Ralph Nader can do
for the Democrats. The G.O.P. candidates all claimed to defend
taxpayers, but Paul was the only one who refused to accept a
taxpayer-funded pension or taxpayer-funded junkets. The candidates all
talked about shrinking big government, but Paul was the only one who
included the Pentagon and NSA wiretaps and petroleum subsidies in his
definition. Bush's approval ratings have been abysmal for years, but
Paul was the only Republican who really campaigned for change.
And in doing so Paul illustrated what was so striking about the
Republican race. The leading candidates had all strayed from Bush and
current orthodoxy in the past — Rudy Giuliani on abortion and gay
rights, John McCain on tax cuts, torture, health care and campaign
finance, Mitt Romney on just about everything. But while Paul was
getting attacked every time he called for a new direction, the rest
spent the primaries minimizing and renouncing their previous
departures, implicitly promising four more years of Bushism. McCain is
lucky he has some time to craft a new message, because that's not where
America stands today, either.
Swanny Note : Ok , so this writer spends time saying all that AMERICA isn't and hasn't mentions WHERE he thinks AMERICA stands. He should also get into some other line of work that makes him check out what Ron Paul is really talking about instead of just INSISTING that it is Ron Paul that is out of step with Reality?
Gee, imagine money actually being BACKED by something other than a Central Bank that just prints more money when they want to ..or need to.
Just imagine what would happen to profit for the street dealers would be if some of the smuggling and growing laws were done away with? The hard core addicts eventually die. You market the say no to hard drugs campaign like they have for Meth. Let me tell you the needle campaigns worked for me. No way did I want to be a person dependant on a needle . No way did I want to fel like no one elses life was important if I didn't have my drugs and needle.
The author was correct when he stated that ALL the other candidates are not good for America , At least, Ron Paul would have given us a fighting chance for real change.
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