Ron Paul Revolution

[quote]SexMachine wrote:

[quote]orion wrote:
Yeah, the last 3 ones being from 2003.

Right now, all that we know is that they worked on one until roughly 2002-2003 and then they stopped.

Meaning, they stopped long before this ridiculous blustering.
[/quote]

No I meant the three IAEA reports in your link dated 18 November, 2 September and 24 May 2011 that outline Iran’s nuclear weapons program in very guarded terms - see my comment above.[/quote]

The U.S. intelligence community has completed and is circulating a new National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iran’s nuclear weapons program that walks back the conclusion of the 2007 NIE, which stated that Iran had halted work on its covert nuclear weapons program.

[quote]SexMachine wrote:

[quote]JEATON wrote:

[quote]SexMachine wrote:
Interesting thing about Ron Paul. I’ve come to learn more about libertarianism and have come to agree with some of it. Of course Paul’s ‘ideas’ didn’t originate with him or his little cabal of paleolibertarian crackpots. Fortunately some of the leading libertarian thinktanks have outed Paul(Reason Magazine, Cato Institute etc.)

EDIT: Having said that I have deep reservations about libertarianism. I don’t want to go into it now. I might at another time.[/quote]

“Outed Paul”?

In what way?. Although I have not read much from Cato in the last few months, Reason has continued to have high praise for Paul. Was this an attempt to discredit Paul by hoping that others would simply take your statement as fact?
[/quote]

and

and

Pretty late. Happy to provide more sources on paleo-crackpot Paul tomorrow.[/quote]

Well, I for am glad that Gingrichs racism is finally openly discussed:

The first comeback surge by Newt Gingrich, back in December, was mostly about the fact that he was the next-in-line plausible anti-Mitt. Then he collapsed. By the way, does anyone remember why? It seems so long ago! Evidently South Carolina Republicans think itâ??s ancient history, because now Gingrich has re-re-returned, and this time itâ??s about simple racism. If he actually wins South Carolina, the nomination fight and the party are suddenly in turmoil. It may only be for a week, but even just for that week, it would reveal a primary electorate that is so consumed with its paranoias that it has turned politics completely away from the question of who might govern the country well to who can best embody our hatreds and revenge fantasies. Conservatism has been half that for 30 years anyway, but it is now on the cusp of dispensing with the artifice and becoming that entirely.

http://institute.ourfuture.org/users/terrance-heath

And Romneys!

What happened to the party of Abraham Lincoln? There was a time when Republicans stood up for African-Americans. But the quartet of leading contenders for the party’s presidential nomination have engaged in some pretty disgusting racist behavior that demonstrates the GOP doesn’t like black people.

Long before he was the presumed frontrunner for the White House and Massachusetts’ governor, Mitt Romney was actively spreading his Mormon faith. At the time, church leaders preached that dark skin was a curse from God. Between 1966 and 1968, Romney was a missionary in France. He believed and taught that God was so displeased with “spirit children” who remained neutral in the war against Lucifer that he turned their skin black.

http://www.miaminewtimes.com/2012-01-12/news/mitt-romney-is-racist/

And then there is of course Obamas racism…

Yes, I said it: Obama is a racist. As the white, conservative mother of black/Mexican/white children, I know a racist when I hear one. So is his buddy, Henry Louis Gates. Don’t let these two Ivy League-educated, erudite, distinguished black men convince you that only whites can be racists. Believe me, these two men are the worst kind of racists: black and elitist.

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, a racist is someone who believes “all members of each racial group possess characteristics or abilities specific to that race, especially to distinguish it as being either superior or inferior to another racial group or racial groups.” When Sgt. Crowley investigated a possible burglary at Prof. Gates’ Cambridge home this week, Gates met a white cop at his door and evidently assumed Crowley was a bad cop, a rogue, a racist cop who would treat him differently than any other suspected perp, just because he was black. That’s racism, folks! What did Gates do when faced with a police officer investigating a burglary in his home? Was Gates polite and courteous to the cop? Did he cooperate and step onto the porch out of the darkened home so Crowley could see his face and ID? Did he calmly explain why a passerby saw him breaking in, if, in fact, it was his own house? Did he speak or act like the esteemed scholar and professor his ID claimed him to be?

WHAT IZ WE GONNA DO !?!

[quote]orion wrote:

[quote]SexMachine wrote:

[quote]orion wrote:
Yeah, the last 3 ones being from 2003.

Right now, all that we know is that they worked on one until roughly 2002-2003 and then they stopped.

Meaning, they stopped long before this ridiculous blustering.
[/quote]

No I meant the three IAEA reports in your link dated 18 November, 2 September and 24 May 2011 that outline Iran’s nuclear weapons program in very guarded terms - see my comment above.[/quote]

The U.S. intelligence community has completed and is circulating a new National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iran’s nuclear weapons program that walks back the conclusion of the 2007 NIE, which stated that Iran had halted work on its covert nuclear weapons program.

http://thecable.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/02/15/exclusive_new_national_intelligence_estimate_on_iran_complete[/quote]

You need to read your own sources. That’s a February 2011 article and it’s talking about one of el Baradei’s 2007 reports and its erroneous ‘conclusions.’ See your own previous link that contains the three IAEA reports of May, Setember and November 2011.

[quote]orion wrote:

[quote]SexMachine wrote:

[quote]JEATON wrote:

[quote]SexMachine wrote:
Interesting thing about Ron Paul. I’ve come to learn more about libertarianism and have come to agree with some of it. Of course Paul’s ‘ideas’ didn’t originate with him or his little cabal of paleolibertarian crackpots. Fortunately some of the leading libertarian thinktanks have outed Paul(Reason Magazine, Cato Institute etc.)

EDIT: Having said that I have deep reservations about libertarianism. I don’t want to go into it now. I might at another time.[/quote]

“Outed Paul”?

In what way?. Although I have not read much from Cato in the last few months, Reason has continued to have high praise for Paul. Was this an attempt to discredit Paul by hoping that others would simply take your statement as fact?
[/quote]

and

and

Pretty late. Happy to provide more sources on paleo-crackpot Paul tomorrow.[/quote]

Well, I for am glad that Gingrichs racism is finally openly discussed:

The first comeback surge by Newt Gingrich, back in December, was mostly about the fact that he was the next-in-line plausible anti-Mitt. Then he collapsed. By the way, does anyone remember why? It seems so long ago! Evidently South Carolina Republicans think it�¢??s ancient history, because now Gingrich has re-re-returned, and this time it�¢??s about simple racism. If he actually wins South Carolina, the nomination fight and the party are suddenly in turmoil. It may only be for a week, but even just for that week, it would reveal a primary electorate that is so consumed with its paranoias that it has turned politics completely away from the question of who might govern the country well to who can best embody our hatreds and revenge fantasies. Conservatism has been half that for 30 years anyway, but it is now on the cusp of dispensing with the artifice and becoming that entirely.

http://institute.ourfuture.org/users/terrance-heath

And Romneys!

What happened to the party of Abraham Lincoln? There was a time when Republicans stood up for African-Americans. But the quartet of leading contenders for the party’s presidential nomination have engaged in some pretty disgusting racist behavior that demonstrates the GOP doesn’t like black people.

Long before he was the presumed frontrunner for the White House and Massachusetts’ governor, Mitt Romney was actively spreading his Mormon faith. At the time, church leaders preached that dark skin was a curse from God. Between 1966 and 1968, Romney was a missionary in France. He believed and taught that God was so displeased with “spirit children” who remained neutral in the war against Lucifer that he turned their skin black.

http://www.miaminewtimes.com/2012-01-12/news/mitt-romney-is-racist/

And then there is of course Obamas racism…

Yes, I said it: Obama is a racist. As the white, conservative mother of black/Mexican/white children, I know a racist when I hear one. So is his buddy, Henry Louis Gates. Don’t let these two Ivy League-educated, erudite, distinguished black men convince you that only whites can be racists. Believe me, these two men are the worst kind of racists: black and elitist.

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, a racist is someone who believes “all members of each racial group possess characteristics or abilities specific to that race, especially to distinguish it as being either superior or inferior to another racial group or racial groups.” When Sgt. Crowley investigated a possible burglary at Prof. Gates’ Cambridge home this week, Gates met a white cop at his door and evidently assumed Crowley was a bad cop, a rogue, a racist cop who would treat him differently than any other suspected perp, just because he was black. That’s racism, folks! What did Gates do when faced with a police officer investigating a burglary in his home? Was Gates polite and courteous to the cop? Did he cooperate and step onto the porch out of the darkened home so Crowley could see his face and ID? Did he calmly explain why a passerby saw him breaking in, if, in fact, it was his own house? Did he speak or act like the esteemed scholar and professor his ID claimed him to be?

WHAT IZ WE GONNA DO !?![/quote]

Romney is a racist because he was a Mormon between 1966 and 1968? Desperate stuff.

[quote]orion wrote:

Long before he was the presumed frontrunner for the White House and Massachusetts’ governor, Mitt Romney was actively spreading his Mormon faith. At the time, church leaders preached that dark skin was a curse from God. Between 1966 and 1968, Romney was a missionary in France. He believed and taught that God was so displeased with “spirit children” who remained neutral in the war against Lucifer that he turned their skin black.

[/quote]

You just don’t understand Romney’s positions on American Indians…

[quote]ZEB wrote:
I’ll say this about Paul he’s consistent. Three Presidential runs and three last place finishes!

NICE![/quote]

We get it! You’re too good of a poster to keeps this up man. Becoming obsessive.

[quote]SexMachine wrote:

[quote]orion wrote:

[quote]SexMachine wrote:

[quote]orion wrote:
Yeah, the last 3 ones being from 2003.

Right now, all that we know is that they worked on one until roughly 2002-2003 and then they stopped.

Meaning, they stopped long before this ridiculous blustering.
[/quote]

No I meant the three IAEA reports in your link dated 18 November, 2 September and 24 May 2011 that outline Iran’s nuclear weapons program in very guarded terms - see my comment above.[/quote]

The U.S. intelligence community has completed and is circulating a new National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iran’s nuclear weapons program that walks back the conclusion of the 2007 NIE, which stated that Iran had halted work on its covert nuclear weapons program.

http://thecable.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/02/15/exclusive_new_national_intelligence_estimate_on_iran_complete[/quote]

You need to read your own sources. That’s a February 2011 article and it’s talking about one of el Baradei’s 2007 reports and its erroneous ‘conclusions.’ See your own previous link that contains the three IAEA reports of May, Setember and November 2011.[/quote]

Yeah, I know, the Iranians say they are no building one, the CIA says they are not building one and the IEAE says they are not building one.

Bomb, bomb, bomb, Iran.

[quote]ZEB wrote:
I’ll say this about Paul he’s consistent. Three Presidential runs and three last place finishes!

NICE![/quote]

And every time his constituency grows.

Since you are so big on trends, how is this for a trend?

One that is accelerating, no less.

Right now, and who knows where I read this a three party run would be around Obama 45, Romney 35, Paul 20-ish.

I could live with that.

That should insure that a Rand Paul, Gary Johnston ticket could crush the Republican on in 2016.

[quote]dk44 wrote:

[quote]ZEB wrote:
I’ll say this about Paul he’s consistent. Three Presidential runs and three last place finishes!

NICE![/quote]

We get it! You’re too good of a poster to keeps this up man. Becoming obsessive. [/quote]

I don’t think you’re being fair to ZEB. After all, he said he admires Paul’s ‘honesty’ and thinks he ‘seems like a decent guy.’ What more do you want? A written endorsement?

[quote]SexMachine wrote:

Romney is a racist because he was a Mormon between 1966 and 1968? Desperate stuff.[/quote]

So you are saying bringing up that he belongs to a church that was blatantly racist not too long ago, in his formative years, no less, is desperate whereas getting money from some KKK lunatics is perfectly reasonable?

I am intrigued by your ideas and would like to subscribe to your newsletter.

[quote]SexMachine wrote:

Paul’s uniformed spokesperson Army Corporal Jesse Thorsen(mugshot above.)

‘Army Reserve spokeswoman Maj. Angel Wallace said participating in a partisan political event in uniform is a violation of Defense Department rules and the military is reviewing whether Thorsen could face legal ramifications.’

As well as being a former burglar(stolen firearm, burglary tools, breached parole) Thorsen and Paul also lied about his military service:

Paul introducing Thorsen in Iowa:

“He’s been serving in the military ten years and he’s been overseas a lot, and a lot of it was in Iraq and Afghanistan.”

Thorsen:

“I’m really excited about a lot of his ideas, especially when it comes to bringing the soldiers home,” he told CNN. “I’ve been serving for 10 years now and all 10 years of those have been during wartime. I would like to see a little peace time Army.”

Official statement from Army about Thorsen:

“Cpl. Jesse Thorsen, an Army Reserve Soldier, stands alone in his opinions regarding his political affiliation and beliefs, and his statements and beliefs in no way reflect that of the Army Reserve.”

The statement also revealed that Thorsen was only ‘deployed once in support of Operation Enduring Freedom in 2009(to Afghanistan.)’ Also states that Thorsen has a total of six years in the reserves and national guard not ten years.
[/quote]

Oh, oh, could we vote for him?

While he may be, or have been a criminal he has at least a hint of a calculating intelligence that is missing in the criminals that are usually elected.

[quote]orion wrote:

So you are saying bringing up that he belongs to a church that was blatantly racist not too long ago, in his formative years, no less, is desperate whereas getting money from some KKK lunatics is perfectly reasonable?

[/quote]

Okay, whatever you like. Romney is evil.

[quote]
I am intrigued by your ideas and would like to subscribe to your newsletter. [/quote]

http://yourldsneighborhood.com/Subscribe.aspx

The Paulnuts should look for Gingrich votes in VA. Operation, deny Romney.

Yes, the most important thing to do is to keep Romney out of the top spot. There really isn’t anything more important than that! Oh wait there is beating Obama…Naw…that’s really secondary to zealots of every kind and nature and not just Paulbots.

Why did Fox exclude veterans for Ron Paul from recent segments?

Ron Paul has claimed that he receives more money from active duty military than all of the other remaining Republican candidates put together. Many people who believe the pundits when they insist Paul’s foreign policy is dangerous and naive wonder if Paul’s claim is true. Well, it is.

In fact, Paul was being modest; he could have further detailed that he actually received five times more than Romney, Gingrich, and Santorum (from January 2011 to September 2011) – put together. You can even throw in military donations for Obama in with the Republican candidates, and Paul still beats all of them. It was the same story for Paul in 2007-2008.

In the fourth quarter of 2007 alone, Paul raised $212,000 from active military; Obama was second with $94,000. Mitt Romney’s top three donors during the 2012 campaign season came from Goldman Sachs, Credit Suisse Group, and Morgan Stanley. Ron Paul’s top three? Army, Navy, and Air Force.

Of course, just because Paul receives more campaign donations from active duty military does not mean he has nailed down every single veteran’s vote or that the veterans that support him speak for everyone in the military. A Boston Globe article on Saturday surmised that Paul may do better with post-9/11 veterans “who are emblematic of the generational divide over the role of the military” than older “Cold War” veterans.

But Paul is clearly the chosen leader among veterans and has received substantial support from both active duty military and veterans of all eras. There are tens of thousands of veterans supporting him on various Facebook pages (far more than I could find for any other candidate), and they are certainly from more than just post-9/11.

So in light of these facts, it is even more shocking that Fox News ran two segments (one Friday and one on Sunday) about which candidate veterans support, and yet failed to have a veteran on who supported Paul, when they had one each for Romney, for Gingrich, and for Santorum in both segments. Fox News did ask one of the veterans about Paul on Friday, to which she replied that she doubted Paul’s claim about receiving more money from the military than the other candidates was even true.

Fox did not correct her with any facts, and since they didn’t have a Paul supporter on no one could dispute what she said. So once again, either Fox is showing their ugly prejudice towards Ron Paul or they are just really inept at doing their job and finding veterans who support him.

Now I don’t have network research resources at my disposal, but just by doing a little research on my own I was quickly able to find and contact not one, but two veterans willing to talk to me about Ron Paul.

Ed Riccardi of Irving, Texas served in the US Army Infantry and Field Artillery D.I. from 1987 to 1997. He told Examiner on Monday, “Fox News has reaffirmed the fact that the media works diligently to marginalize Paul’s candidacy and impact. They like to deify the military as sacrificial lambs but are not interested in letting their true voice be heard.”

Since Fox News has not lived up to its “Fair and Balanced” slogan and has denied veterans who support Ron Paul an equal voice on their show, their voices are welcome here.

Kurtis Constantine, 35, of Herriman, Utah, served in the Air Force from 1994 to 2004. For six years he served in Security Forces (the Air Force’s Military Police) and four years in the Office of Special Investigations specializing in counter-terrorism, narcotics, and child exploitation investigations. He seconded Riccardi’s thoughts: “I’m not surprised they didn’t have a Paul supporter on to debate the other military members. They were all spouting the talking points of candidates that want to demonstrate America’s greatness through intimidation and by acting as the policeman of the world.”

Constantine currently works as Director of Quality Systems at Merit Medical and is running for the Utah House of Representatives this year (in District 52) and will also be running to be a national delegate. He told Examiner that he first decided to support Paul in 2007. During that election cycle, he had started out supporting John McCain because of his military background, but he began to have doubts once he realized he didn’t agree with him on many of the issues.

After complaining to a friend that he didn’t feel any of the candidates represented his views, his friend suggested he learn more about Ron Paul (like Constantine, Paul is also an Air Force veteran). He sent Constantine an hour long video about Paul, and at first he was reluctant to watch it, but he decided that he should learn as much as possible about all of the candidates.

He said,

I remember watching that video and cheering because I could not believe there was a candidate that could talk plainly about fiscal issues and foreign policy in a way that reflected my beliefs -- that we should stop spending money we don't have, and we should stop being the policeman of the world!

He continued,

Many people say they disagree with Ron Paul on his "foreign policy." They seem to think for some reason that he wants to turn our back on Israel and ignore Iran. This couldn't be further from the truth. He believes that we should stop providing aid to all countries for political purposes. For example, we give Israel billions in aid and then give their adversaries billions more in aid. We destabilize regions when we overthrow regimes, install puppet governments only to turn around years later and overthrow them again. 

Ron Paul is the only candidate that acknowledges the fact that our actions around the world have repercussions, or "blow back." For example, the 9/11 terrorists were from Saudi Arabia. They stated their reason for attacking America was because of our military bases in the "holy lands" of Saudi Arabia. However, Americans were told they attacked us because of our prosperity and freedom. This is simply not the case. How would we feel if the Chinese or Iranians had bases in America? I suspect that some of us would go to extremes to make them realize we want them out of our country.

Constantine pointed out that Ron Paul understands that war is big business â?? especially undeclared wars. He served under the Clinton administration and watched military spending get cut severely. He remembers that in 1999 into early 2001 it was almost impossible to get the equipment and supplies they needed. After 9/11, he says they had more money than they could spend. “The war machine kicked into overdrive and has stayed there for 11 years. What other reason could there be for us to go into Iraq and Afghanistan, other than to feed the war machine? Again, I agree with Ron Paul that there was no strategic interest in those countries and no threat to our national security.”

Riccardi, of Texas, said that he is tired of hearing people say they like Paul except for foreign policy. He said,

I think Ron Paul will be the most unifying president this country has ever seen and for all the right reasons. He is a leader with integrity and honesty -- this is a pretty alien concept in our culture. All Americans will benefit from a Paul presidency. The only ones that won't are selling something or addicted to the status quo.

Constantine believes as Ron Paul does, that we should not be committing our soldiers’ lives and our nation’s treasure to wars without a declaration of war. He said he believes that is the reason Paul gets more donations from the military than all of the other candidates combined. “Soldiers want to be defending our country, not sent to die in some country with no strategic value so a military industrial company’s shareholders are happy.”

He said he likes Paul’s humble approach to foreign policy:

We should strive for peace and commerce with all, entangling alliances with none. When a country threatens our national security we go to war with a constitutional declaration of war. When we want to hunt down terrorists, we do so with constitutional Letters of Marque and Reprisal.

When considering why Paul receives so much more money from active duty military than the other candidates, Riccardi was reminded of something General Douglas MacArthur once said:

â??The soldier, above all other people, prays for peace, for he must suffer and bear the deepest wounds and scars of war.â??

Well I think it’s pretty obvious that FOX is trying to keep Paul down. And… WE WON’T STAND FOR IT!!

I say we BOYCOTT FOX NEWS!

Down with FOX.

Down with everything that is FOX, and down with those who watch FOX, and down with those who are for FOX. And down with Foes! And…while I’m at it down with all who cannot see that Ron Paul IS the only man who can beat Obama.

(this message was paid for by a 20 something knot head)

[quote]ZEB wrote:
Well I think it’s pretty obvious that FOX is trying to keep Paul down. And… WE WON’T STAND FOR IT!!

I say we BOYCOTT FOX NEWS!

Down with FOX.

Down with everything that is FOX, and down with those who watch FOX, and down with those who are for FOX. And down with Foes! And…while I’m at it down with all who cannot see that Ron Paul IS the only man who can beat Obama.

(this message was paid for by a 20 something knot head)[/quote]

I have always felt that way about FAUX news , I suppose some one had to pay for it at least it was not and older person with the lack of foresight

Operation CNN Debate Blackout OpDebateBlackout - Ron Paul

YouTube? feature=player_embedded&v=i5YbKdGFQAA

Video removed by user, he failed in their attempts. Part of me laughs ; )

From thestreet.com

Ron Paul: The Strongest Man in the World?
By John DeFeo 01/17/12 - 09:26 AM EST

NEW YORK (TheStreet) – Ron Paul is an enemy of the people. That is, in a literary sense. In 1882, Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen penned a tragicomedy that, in many ways, mirrors Dr. Ron Paul’s political career.

"'An Enemy of the People' addresses the irrational tendencies of the masses, and the hypocritical and corrupt nature of the political system that they support. It is the story of one brave man's struggle to do the right thing and speak the truth in the face of extreme social intolerance," according to Wikipedia.

The protagonist of the play, Dr. Stockmann, "is taunted and denounced as a lunatic, an 'Enemy of the People.'" In the end, the well-intentioned doctor loses his friends and reputation, but emboldens himself with these words: the strongest man in the world is the man who stands most alone. 

Years ago, I’m ashamed to admit, I dismissed Ron Paul as a crazy old man. Of course, I did so without listening to anything that Dr. Paul had said or reading anything that he wrote. I was parroting what I heard from others (they were probably doing the same).

Then came the financial crisis of 2008, and I was led down a rabbit hole. The political response to the crisis (bailouts, opacity, rewarding failure) did not sit well with me – I became obsessed with economics, the Federal Reserve and the track record of U.S. politicians. Within months, I had disavowed political parties (may the best man, or woman, win) and taken an interest in Mr. End the Fed, Ron Paul.
Nobody’s Right All the Time (or, Interest Rates are Tough to Predict)

When Ron Paul opposed the war in Iraq in 2002, he was a vocal minority. Unfortunately, his concerns proved valid.

In the same year, Congressman Paul warned of a housing bubble and went so far as to introduce legislation intended to limit taxpayer exposure to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (the bill never made it past a committee led by Rep. Mike Oxley and minority ranking member, Rep. Barney Frank).

While Paul’s foes – both Republican and Democrat – would like to portray him as a stopped clock (unwavering, and only accurate a small percentage of the time), this is simply not the case.

In a speech before Congress, Paul confessed his fears of how America might change in the next five to 10 years. A decade later his warnings seem a lot less crazy, rather, heartfelt and prescient.
A Champion of Conservatism – and Liberalism?

In 2004, Dr. Keith Poole – a political science professor at the University of Georgia – ranked 3,320 politicians (who have held office anytime between 1937-2002) from most liberal to most conservative. Ronald Reagan ranked as 77th most conservative, Barry Goldwater, 50th.

Ron Paul ranked first.

So how can it be that GOP voters (as polled by Rasmussen) view Ron Paul as the least conservative of the GOP candidates? Or that pundits like Dick Morris have referred to Dr. Paul as a left-wing radical. I offer this assessment:

Republicans have forgotten what conservatism once meant:

conserving the resources and finances of the Republic,
conserving the lives of American troops, and
conserving the powers of the federal government.

This is the platform that Republican Congressman Howard Buffett (#40) – Warren Buffett’s father – once stood on, and this is the platform that Ron Paul stands on now.

However, it is important to note that by conserving the powers of the federal government, this allows for liberal ideas to flourish (should the people of individual states want them to).

But states’ rights aren’t perfect – far from.

Under Ron Paul’s strict interpretation of the Constitution, states could impose ridiculous, backwards laws that restrict personal freedom. These states, however, would probably suffer an exodus of talented individuals (or the government would soon be overturned).

In essence, states’ rights are a form of antitrust act – it’s much easier to escape to one of 49 other states than it is to abandon your citizenship in the face of oppressive federal laws. It’s also what our Founding Fathers had in mind.
Not Anybody but Obama

My closest acquaintances (mostly Republicans) think I’m a nut for my willingness to support Ron Paul because they fear that he (as a third party) will erode the vote of an “electable” GOP candidate, thereby securing a second term for President Obama.

I, too, would find that outcome undesirable – but I’m no happier with the other side of the coin.

On New Year’s Eve, without scrutiny, President Obama codified his ability to detain and imprison American citizens indefinitely, without trial. My acquaintances decry the president for this, yet ignore the fact that the bill received near-unanimous support from Republican legislators. Every GOP presidential candidate – with the exception of Ron Paul – has expressed support for overreaching executive power.

Never mind the fact that the U.S. has already abused similar powers (holding an innocent Turkish man prisoner, for years, without charge or trial). We’ve also assassinated American citizens abroad (one of them a teenager), again, without charge or trial.

This does not make America safer – it provides our enemies with powerful propaganda and makes America a more attractive target.
The Illusion of Choice (and Change)

Democrats have long voted for war and reduced civil liberties. Republicans have voted for increased government and unbridled spending. Both parties have offered the power of government to the highest bidder.

I once wrote that in choosing a political candidate, Americans should first ask themselves two questions:

Would this candidate allow any form of harm (economic, social, physical) to be inflicted on America if it meant scoring a personal or political gain?
If not, does this candidate have the wherewithal and strength of character to ask the same question of his or her peers?

In my opinion, Ron Paul passes this test. For that matter, so does a guy like Rep. Dennis Kucinich (167th most liberal), whom I hold in higher esteem than the president or his GOP opponents. Integrity can be found if we look for it.
Where I Stand

I hate guns. Same goes for drugs and war. I believe that rights are, by definition, applicable to all persons of any race, religion or sexual orientation. I don’t think a gold standard is necessary.

I wish that education, housing and health care were available to all Americans, yet I’m realistic enough to admit that our government’s involvement in these industries (though well-intentioned), has led to ever-escalating costs. Decades ago, a single income could pay for a home, an education and medical services. Inflation and wage stagnation have made this a distant memory for nearly all Americans.

I don’t believe that Ron Paul has all the answers, and if he were elected president, I don’t believe that he could achieve most of his policy goals (by his own admission, this is a good thing – the president is not a dictator).

Nevertheless, Ron Paul has my vote.

My intention in writing all of this is not to persuade you, the reader, to vote for Ron Paul. Persuasion is the tool of political parties, or “pressure groups,” as Ludwig von Mises liked to call them.

Instead, I hope that you – if you have not before – will stop voting on party lines and instead, trust in your own judgment. Elections are an investment in the future of our country. To that end, I’ll leave you with the immortal words of the “father of value investing,” Benjamin Graham:

You are neither right nor wrong because the crowd disagrees with you. You are right because your data and reasoning are right.

– Written by John DeFeo in New York City Follow @johndefeo