The Libertarian Thread

just curious...why can't you run there??

Upstate New York is conservative, so they won't take kindly to a gay liberal. And with redistricting set to take place in 2010, Upstate is likely to lose two Congressional seats and a few state legislature seats anyway. They'd become progressively Republican, so I don't want to run in a place I can't win or have the opportunity to ascend to higher office.
 
Some day, when I know exactly what it is I want to do, I plan to run for public office. Unfortunately, I can't run back home, so it will take a lot of time and networking. But it isn't out of the realm of possibilities.

Also, ShadowBoxing, what would you be interested in running for? Do you have any political experiences or connections? (you may have mentioned it, but I avoided most of the conversation because I'm neither opposed to or against Ron Paul/ libertarianism)
Well I worked for a campaign for a while. I know certain people who hold various offices. I've met Bill Clinton twice and talked with him:oldrazz: . But...no...no real connections yet, I'd say. I'm going to go back to school first, either for Public Policy or Law, probably law, as they say it's a better safety net. Maybe business as well, because there seems to be launchpads from the private sector, and let's just say I stand to inherit a business anyways.

What I would run for. Something local to start out, like state legislature.
Upstate New York is conservative, so they won't take kindly to a gay liberal.
Bah! I want to run in South Carolina, and I was born in Massachusetts. lol. I'm going to fake a Southern accent when I run, lol.
 
So much to reply to :(

Why are you so confrontational? Then you ask why people complain about Paul supporters so much. I have never met a group of political supporters as confrontational and in your face as Ron Paul supporters.

You're really not. Anytime someone brings up something negative or at least something they think is negative) about Ron Paul, you brush it off with some lame retort. I mean, you were defending the racist content of his newsletter earlier. Seriously.

I don't think any of us has been any more confrontational than any other political supporter. Most of the negative I see people bring up are based on ignorance and half-truths. If I did the same to another candidates thread, I'm sure I'd get the same type of "confrontation".

I dont know if there is some far reaching conspiracy to blackout Ron Paul, but IMO most media outlets...much like MOST of the american public know that Ron Paul has never,, nor will ever be considered a serious candidate.....I asked 10 of my coworkers , just average people, who Ron Paul was...3 of them had heard the name and only one actually knew he was running for President....the other 7 looked at me and said "who???"

How can you say most Americans will never consider him serious, when 7 out of ten people you ask, don't know who he is.

And, as I said before, in my real world experience, some people that I know who could care less about voting, has expressed intrest in voting because of him. That says to me that if more disinfranchised voters heard his message, he might actually be a serious contender. BUT, the other candidates don't want that.

yes because the internet is a bastion of truth and journalistic integrity......and porn

Unfortunately, the media isn't about information anymore. It's more like real world entertainment. That's why on wednesday, Fox (and I assume the other stations) were covering the breaking story of Britneys release from the hospital, a la OJ Simpson, helicopter and all.

And the average person now has access to the internet 24/7. People know who Ron Paul is. People know what he stands for. They just didn't vote for him. You guys are playing up this "ignorance of the masses due to the media" card way too much as an excuse for Paul losing. The fact is, his message just didn't click with middle America.

You're looking at it through biased eyes. You may know who he is and what he stands for, because politics interests you. If someone asked me who the better team was, the Wizards or the Bulls, I couldn't answer because I have no interest in basketball. But someone who does could say, "Come on, EVERYBODY KNOWS the Bulls are better."

Most Americans don't care about politics. Hell, most Americans don't even vote. And of the ones that do, they get their news from tv most likely. And the one who might care, will only care enough to MAYBE take 10 minutes out of the day to look up the top candidates on the internet.

People who actually take the time to follow politics are rare, IMO. How many users are registered to the Hype, something like 20,000? How many of them post regularly in the political form, maybe 25?

lol@ this whole thread.

The dude was like I voted for Ron Paul but how will he win if people dont know him?

So why did you vote for him? lol. Why vote for the least gaurnteed winner? lol@ anything else....

This isn't horse racing, it's politics.
 
That wasn't a comment directed at the Iraq war, or any war in particular. I think part of Ron Paul's problem is he doesn't see the difference between the war we have in Iraq and other middle eastern conflicts which might or might not require our intervention.

The problem with the other candidates is that they don't realize that the middle east has ALWAYS been in conflict. WE are not going to change that, no matter how many roadmaps we come up with. Our presence there only makes things WORSE, and then things like 9/11 happen, and we end up looking like jackasses.

We can either go on the offensive, kill a bunch of people, stir up the hornets nest, make more of them hate us and give them justification to attack us again; OR we could go on the defensive, keep them contained in their neck of the woods, watch our own backs, and let them kill each other.

Yes, I agree with you that the middle east is complex, BUT I think it's Paul that understands this and is looking at the big picture. The other candidates position is us=good, them=bad. Can't get any more black and white then that.

I think it's obvious running this particular war, with tax cuts on top of it, was a bad idea. I don't think the world is so black and white though that one mistake, no matter how large, determines how we should conduct our foreign relations in all cases.

But it's not one mistake. It's been a series of mistakes stretching back to the end of WWI. Granted, most of those early mistakes are the fault of Britian and France, but since then, our insatiable need for oil has not helped the people of the middle east, except for a few royals.

We can't change the past, but we certainly aren't learning from it.

Chances are if a country, like say Iran, were to acquire nuclear weapons, simply staying at home with our thumbs up our asses isn't going to prevent or deter them from firing them on American soil.

1. Without thinking from the perspective of an American, why shouldn't they be aloud to have a nuke? Isreal, India, and Pakastan have them. Why isn't Iran aloud to have one to protect themselves from foreign aggressors, ie; us?

2. Even if they did get one, they don't have a means of firing one at us. And if they ever do, we should have the means to intercept it.

3. What's going to prevent and deter them from firing one at us if they were capable, is the fact that we would ANNIHILATE them.

By you're logic Huckabee, who by far has the least resources, should have been out by Super Tuesday. Romney, who has the most money by far, ought to be the front runner. Guiliani, who has slightly more name recognition than the other candidates, ought not to be a footnote of a footnote by now. However, this doesn't change the fact that one candidate the media wrote off, Huckabee, came back and won 5 states on Super Tuesday, and could possibly do very well in the upcoming Louisiana and Kansas primary.

Huckabee has the religious right. The fact that the media wrote off Huckabee shows how stupid they are. Two left leaning republicans, and a mormon. NOBODY should be surprised by this.

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Actually, I was. That's kind of a key point me and Matt are making, that you consistently miss. People have their reasons for voting for Huckabee, and it's issues based, just as most of those polls claim issues and the candidate as a person factor most into their decision making. Fact is, most wrote off McCain early on in these primaries, almost giving him no time in debates, and devoting most of the air time to Guiliani, Thompson and Romney, all of whom are total wash outs.

Okay, and people can't vote over religious issues? So Mormon's wanted a mormon in office, I don't go around criticising mormon's for voting for those reasons. Just like a don't criticize wacko's for wanting another wacko in office. What I do criticize, however, is Ron Paul supporters blaiming everyone else for their candidate's downfall. Or maybe I should start saying "the media" is at fault for the Patriots losing the superbowl:whatever:

The difference is that all those candidates have had debates where they've had good coverage and they've had bad coverage. Paul has not had good coverage IMO.

FACT: Ron Paul is fifth, count it, fifth in fund raising for his own party. He is eight in fundraising overall.
FACT: Ron Paul is dead last in vote count
FACT: Everyone KNOWS who Ron Paul is, he is the guy who takes extreme stances in all the debates and stays in the race long past the point where it is STATISTICALLY possible for him to make any ground whatsoever.

You don't base your logic on facts, sorry.

Fact number 3 isn't a fact. Few people know who Paul is, and a lot of them are misinformed. Extemity is a matter of opinion. I think banning gay marrage, believing in creationism, and illegal invasions and occupations are pretty extreme, but most of the candidates don't. And I don't think admitting that we some what made them want to attack us on 9/11 is an extreme view.

McCain and Huckabee started out as dark horse candidates behind the much more formitable and rich Guiliani and Romney. You completely ignore this to make a point, that, by all rights, made no sense to begin with. Sorry, the people who vote make up their own minds for their own reasons, and in this case the media, who was toting Guiliani as the preceived frontrunning way back in 2007, were completely and utterly wrong. They totally, I mean totally, wrote off McCain. They said he was too old, and if you were following the debates, you'd realize he got very little face time in the beginning. It was only after New Hampshire, and South Carolina that anyone started paying attention to him.

...Because he won Iowa, something no one though he would do.

Yeah, ummmm, no.

Are you even watching the election coverage:huh: , like at all. He picked up 5 states yesterday, after THE MEDIA completely wrote him off in favor of Romney who JUST DROPPED OUT. Everyone thought Huckabee would win SC, he didn't. Now, after he was sidelined in the last debate, he comes back and carries the south.

For my reply to this block, read above.

No, he just wants "to leave it up to the states". Actually, come to think of it, that's basically his stance on everything: leave it up to the states. So he doesn't really say "I want to legalize this/that" just that everything is everyone else's decision.

I think certain decisions should be left up to the states...gay marriage being one of them.....I personally feel marriage should be between 2(two) consenting adults....and by adult I mean 18 yo none of that emancipated crap

A lot of laws are left up to the state, so I don't see how you guys are seeing this as a negitive.

That's nice and all, but we also have the Commerce clause, the equal protections clause and a number of ammendments to consider. The constitution is a living document, not a Bible, that's why we have an ammendment process and why we have judicial review. The Constitution was not created at a time when we had a need for NASA, an industrial sector the economy or even a modern education system. I was a political science major in college, went in a Republican and came out a Democrat. I probably understand more about this nations history than you do.

Ron Paul's solution to everything: go back to the way the founders did it...is that what you're saying. Sorry, won't happen. It must be nice to run a homogenious society, based in agriculture, where only white male land owners can vote and hold public office. Now, we don't have that luxury.

You seriously don't believe that he wants to take us back to the 1700s :wow: ?

Thankfully the founding fathers, I think, knew this and wrote a pretty vague document. "Life", "liberty" and the "pursuit" of happiness or even what a "right" is, is never clearly defined in the constitution. Sure, you can read Jefferson's letters and find out he had a pretty clear picture of what Government was supposed to be...but then again Jefferson also wanted an entirely new constitution and Government formed every twenty years...and we're still using the original.

The Founding Fathers wanted many things: they wanted an executive who never spoke before Congress. That reminded them too much of kings before parliament. They wanted a country with no standing armies, ever. They felt it gave the executive too much power, when militia's would suffice. They wanted blacks and women to be second class citizens, because they lacked the mental and physical capacities of men...although Jefferson slowly began to abandon that belief. They also wanted an executive who wasn't elected by the people, but rather appointed by Congress. Neither Washington, nor Adams, nor Jefferson were elected in any way similar to today's method. So I don't see how Ron Paul literalists seem to want a literally interpreted constitution in only some regards.

Saying people that support Paul are all constitution literalist is like saying all people who believe in Christ is a Bible literalist.

This may shock you, but just like every other person who supports a candidate, they don't ALL agree with EVERY aspect of their platform. I admit, some things I read about him and go :huh: , like getting rid of the DOE. But, he most closely represents what my ideal America should be. And frankly, the DOE is hardly the envy of the worlds, and no other candidate offers a better solution, so why not give it a try?

And Paul isn't trying to take us back to 1700s, that's absurd to think. He wants the consititution to be more relevent than it's being treated now. Frankly, ALL candidates talk highly about the ideas of the founding fathers and the greatness of the constitution, but again, Paul is the only one honest enough to back that claim up. Other people just think of the constitution as an obstacle to get around.

You see the reason the powers of the Federal Government have been expanded IS because of the constitution being interpreted correctly in changing times. Yes, one could argue that certain adminstrations have abused this power, but I guess you could also argue states abuse their rights when they withhold blacks from attending school with white students. The commerce clause protects the Federal Government's right to regulate goods that are produced in one state but consumed by many, or another. Think about this in a modern era context.

Education: originally it was a commody consumed by one state. You probably, or at least in most cases, were educated in one state, grew up in that state, and held employment in that state. Now a days the likelyhood you will settle where you grew up is pretty slim, and it is in the best interest of the Government to make sure your rights are protected if you move from one state to another to ensure you can get the same quality education. Imagine if you move from one state to another, only to find they educated their residents completely differently. That would be pretty troublesome, wouldn't it?

Or perhaps another example. the environment. If you pollute does it affect just you? No, as we've planely seen it effects everyone. Not just in your state, but now as far north as the polar ice caps and as far south as Santa's workshop. The Government has a vested interest in making sure the pollution made by California doesn't effect the clear skies of Nevada, Colorado or Utah: all of which can potentially be affected.

Am I a proponent of big Government, I suppose a Ron Paul supporter would say I am. I like to think though I understand the world is slightly more complex than Ron Paul would make it. Property right's will not stop people from polluting, it will harbor it in fact. State's rights will not protect gay's, mexican's or minorities, it will create a country divided, as it did in the past. The Government's job, first and foremost, according to the Constitution you keep quoting is to protect both the rights of it's citizens, and protect our country from attack. If you think you can accomplish these things with strict constructionalism in today's era, with non interventionalist foreign policy, with low taxes (especially in the current economic climate) you're very much entitled to that belief.

That's a lot to digest, and sounds like an alarmist view point. No one is trying to get rid of the federal government. Giving more power to the states isn't going to result in legal segregation again. Property rights can help pollution in that if someones pollution affects my property, I can sue them for it. Besides, what's the government doing now and what are the other candidate going to do about it that is better? Education, you make it seem if I move from one state to the next, 1+1 might not equal 2. I guess we can use the Democrat method of fixing a problem; throw money at it. :csad:

The problem with Ron Paul is all his solutions are the same to me: turn back the clock. Want to fix education, get rid of the DOE and go back to the constitution. Want to fix terrorism, pull all our forces out of the middle east and pretend we never interviewed, we shouldn't be there in the first place. But guess what? we are. Ron Paul lives to criticize the world we are in, not fix it. You will NEVER GO BACK to the way the founding father's intended. It's not going to happen. It wasn't going to happen when Lincoln took office, and it sure as sh** ain't happening now.

No one is trying to turn back the clock. Paul is actually the only one trying to fix things by trying something new. Everyone else is just doing the same old thing with a slight twist.

And you really sound anti-constitution. Like we should scrap the whole thing and start again.
 
Property rights can help pollution in that if someones pollution affects my property, I can sue them for it. .
Okay, what if you don't give a sh**? Or what if you're a nuclear power plant and you just buy up a whole bunch of land so you can pollute the sh** out of it?
 
Heated......

Not heated, just very long winded.

Okay, what if you don't give a sh**? Or what if you're a nuclear power plant and you just buy up a whole bunch of land so you can pollute the sh** out of it?

Then you are a bad person. Then you get taken to court, because what you did on your property adversely effected someone elses.
 
Then you are a bad person. Then you get taken to court, because what you did on your property adversely effected someone elses.

Bull****. If someone lives near a radioactive storage facility, it's their own damn fault. Usually neighborhoods disclose that sort of thing, and in some cases, the government offers to compensate citizens if they feel the facility is interfering with their health.

Also, nuclear power plants themselves are required to be built away from residential areas, usually outside a three-mile radius.
 
That's nice and all, but we also have the Commerce clause, the equal protections clause and a number of ammendments to consider. The constitution is a living document, not a Bible, that's why we have an ammendment process and why we have judicial review. The Constitution was not created at a time when we had a need for NASA, an industrial sector the economy or even a modern education system. I was a political science major in college, went in a Republican and came out a Democrat. I probably understand more about this nations history than you do.

LMAO… I knew you were a poli sci student the second I read you first post on this board. I have never met a poli sci student whose views were so far shaped in one direction that almost all resemblance of critical thought were completely driven out. Only through today’s college proffesors would any American look at The Constitution of The United States America, the bedrock of your country and open up an argument referring to one of its amendments with “That's nice and all.”

Ron Paul's solution to everything: go back to the way the founders did it...is that what you're saying. Sorry, won't happen. It must be nice to run a homogenious society, based in agriculture, where only white male land owners can vote and hold public office. Now, we don't have that luxury. Thankfully the founding fathers, I think, knew this and wrote a pretty vague document. "Life", "liberty" and the "pursuit" of happiness or even what a "right" is, is never clearly defined in the constitution. Sure, you can read Jefferson's letters and find out he had a pretty clear picture of what Government was supposed to be...but then again Jefferson also wanted an entirely new constitution and Government formed every twenty years...and we're still using the original.

No, Ron Paul’s message has been for this country not to lose sight of what the sprit of this country was and should be as the founders had intended. His views, had you bothered listening, are very much rooted in the modern day and he himself has suggested changes to the Constitution to help bring it up to speed with the modern era. He has also stated that when these changes are made they should be done very carefully and changes made to the Constitution should never be taken lightly. I find it very humorous that you seem to admire Thomas Jefferson, (who happens to be one of my historical heroes) and yet are so opposed to Ron Paul. The vision he has for America is rooted in part in Jeffersonian ideals.

The Founding Fathers wanted many things: they wanted an executive who never spoke before Congress. That reminded them too much of kings before parliament. They wanted a country with no standing armies, ever. They felt it gave the executive too much power, when militia's would suffice. They wanted blacks and women to be second class citizens, because they lacked the mental and physical capacities of men...although Jefferson slowly began to abandon that belief. They also wanted an executive who wasn't elected by the people, but rather appointed by Congress. Neither Washington, nor Adams, nor Jefferson were elected in any way similar to today's method. So I don't see how Ron Paul literalists seem to want a literally interpreted constitution in only some regards.


You see the reason the powers of the Federal Government have been expanded IS because of the constitution being interpreted correctly in changing times. Yes, one could argue that certain adminstrations have abused this power, but I guess you could also argue states abuse their rights when they withhold blacks from attending school with white students. The commerce clause protects the Federal Government's right to regulate goods that are produced in one state but consumed by many, or another. Think about this in a modern era context.

The Founding Fathers did want many things and they were not perfect. We have had 200 years of fine tuning and we are still evolving as a country. To play the race angle in a debate like this is weak and tired. It is no longer relevant in today’s society. Yes, it is a historical fact that there was slavery and bigotry that was rampant in the US at one point in its history but every major country has had it young dark times. The assertion that this country’s successful are exclusively made up of old white guys is completely false and is either a complete misunderstanding of reality or and out and out lie. This little portion of you dissertation I will wrap up to an immaterial tangent.


Education: originally it was a commody consumed by one state. You probably, or at least in most cases, were educated in one state, grew up in that state, and held employment in that state. Now a days the likelyhood you will settle where you grew up is pretty slim, and it is in the best interest of the Government to make sure your rights are protected if you move from one state to another to ensure you can get the same quality education. Imagine if you move from one state to another, only to find they educated their residents completely differently. That would be pretty troublesome, wouldn't it?

Actually from grades K-12 I attended 28 different schools. YES 28. I can tell you first hand that the education progression and pace varies widely, not only from state to state but in many cases county to county.

Now this may be a shock to you but the federal government does not now, nor has it ever set the curriculum or graduation requirements for our schools.

Education is primarily a State and local responsibility in the United States. It is States and communities, as well as public and private organizations of all kinds, that establish schools and colleges, develop curricula, and determine requirements for enrollment and graduation. The structure of education finance in America reflects this predominant State and local role. Of an estimated $1 trillion being spent nationwide on education at all levels for school year 2007-2008, a substantial majority will come from State, local, and private sources. This is especially true at the elementary and secondary level, where just over 91 percent of the funds will come from non-Federal sources.

But don’t take my word for it … http://www.ed.gov look it up yourself. The most fascinating thing about it is that 91% of the annual 1 trillion raised comes from the “evil privet sector” of non-Federal sources.

Or perhaps another example. the environment. If you pollute does it affect just you? No, as we've planely seen it effects everyone. Not just in your state, but now as far north as the polar ice caps and as far south as Santa's workshop. The Government has a vested interest in making sure the pollution made by California doesn't effect the clear skies of Nevada, Colorado or Utah: all of which can potentially be affected.

Ok... tangent again. Not sure what you are arguing here but yeah pollution is bad. Unless you are trying to draw a parallel in the effects of pollution and perceived inequality in the education system with is a horrible analogy based in a wrong assumption.

Am I a proponent of big Government, I suppose a Ron Paul supporter would say I am. I like to think though I understand the world is slightly more complex than Ron Paul would make it. Property right's will not stop people from polluting, it will harbor it in fact. State's rights will not protect gay's, mexican's or minorities, it will create a country divided, as it did in the past. The Government's job, first and foremost, according to the Constitution you keep quoting is to protect both the rights of it's citizens, and protect our country from attack. If you think you can accomplish these things with strict constructionalism in today's era, with non interventionalist foreign policy, with low taxes (especially in the current economic climate) you're very much entitled to that belief.

Typical ingrained fear IMO. The Bush Corpocrats have us fearing the radical terrorists boogie men and the Socialist crowd has us fearing ourselves. Both sides are utterly convinced that we as a people have no ability to think on our own. I will just agree to disagree with you here. There is no reason to go round and round trying to convince one another to see each other’s views here because I honestly do not feel it is going to happen.

The problem with Ron Paul is all his solutions are the same to me: turn back the clock. Want to fix education, get rid of the DOE and go back to the constitution. Want to fix terrorism, pull all our forces out of the middle east and pretend we never interviewed, we shouldn't be there in the first place. But guess what? we are. Ron Paul lives to criticize the world we are in, not fix it. You will NEVER GO BACK to the way the founding father's intended. It's not going to happen. It wasn't going to happen when Lincoln took office, and it sure as sh** ain't happening now.


That is where you are dead wrong again. Unless you mean turn back the clock to less corrupted time. You see I have been having these arguments back and forth about Capitalism vs Socialism/Communism for a long time. Whether you realize it or not that is what you are arguing here. In doing so I have seen a single commonality… Corruption.

It is the one major area people negelct to talk about.

As of now the tie between lobbyist and Washington need to be severed permanently. The government needs to return to working as a regulatory entity that is active in oversight and enforcement only. As of now government is nothing more than a business partner to big business. This being the case they are not entirely working in the best interest of the American people. This is a violation of the basic fundamentals of our government and to is not what we pay taxes for.

Many are under the assumption that Capitalism is some how bad and Socialism is the greener grass on the other side of the hill when in fact we have never been given the opportunity to see any of the worlds societal ideologies work without the taint of corruption on it.

Capitalism is in fact just as workable as anything else and I would argue that in fact it is superior because it is an environment that is conducive to absolute freedom of choice, which is every living person birthright.

The problem is not what we are doing; it is how we are doing it. Until a major reform in this country takes place and someone comes along who is thinking outside of the box we will stay on this downward spiraling path.

This is the reason people are attracted to Ron Paul. He has new and fresh ideas based on freedom and reform.

It has been shown over and over that the current way of doing things is not working to think anything else is just crazy. To those who do not agree I submit a quote from someone far more intelligent and insightful than myself.

“Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results." -Albert Einstein



Ron Paul has been branded a radical for being so different in his approach to things and I argue he is the only sane one in a room of nuts. The reason we are in trouble now is because we have gone away and circumnavigate the Constitution. I agree with Paul that the way to fix this country is not not go further away from it but to get back to what made this country great to begin with.

No good has ever come from giving up ones freedoms. Historical Fact.
 
Well, Ron Paul supporters, it looks like your candidate may be unofficially leaving the race:

From Ron Paul's Website
Whoa! What a year this has been. And what achievements we have had. If I may quote Trotsky of all people, this Revolution is permanent. It will not end at the Republican convention. It will not end in November. It will not end until we have won the great battle on which we have embarked. Not because of me, but because of you. Millions of Americans -- and friends in many other countries -- have dedicated themselves to the principles of liberty: to free enterprise, limited government, sound money, no income tax, and peace. We will not falter so long as there is one restriction on our persons, our property, our civil liberties. How much I owe you. I can never possibly repay your generous donations, hard work, whole-hearted dedication and love of freedom. How blessed I am to be associated with you. Carol, of course, sends her love as well.

Let me tell you my thoughts. With Romney gone, the chances of a brokered convention are nearly zero. But that does not affect my determination to fight on, in every caucus and primary remaining, and at the convention for our ideas, with just as many delegates as I can get. But with so many primaries and caucuses now over, we do not now need so big a national campaign staff, and so I am making it leaner and tighter. Of course, I am committed to fighting for our ideas within the Republican party, so there will be no third party run. I do not denigrate third parties -- just the opposite, and I have long worked to remove the ballot-access restrictions on them. But I am a Republican, and I will remain a Republican.

I also have another priority. I have constituents in my home district that I must serve. I cannot and will not let them down. And I have another battle I must face here as well. If I were to lose the primary for my congressional seat, all our opponents would react with glee, and pretend it was a rejection of our ideas. I cannot and will not let that happen.

In the presidential race and the congressional race, I need your support, as always. And I have plans to continue fighting for our ideas in politics and education that I will share with you when I can, for I will need you at my side. In the meantime, onward and upward! The neocons, the warmongers, the socialists, the advocates of inflation will be hearing much from you and me.

Sincerely,

Ron

He may not officially suspend his campaign, but from what I gather from this, he isn't going to actively campaign between now and the convention.
 
I think he was the last one to know he wasn't in the race.
 
Well, since he'll never get adequate airtime to say anything I'm sure this is the alternative.
 
Bull****. If someone lives near a radioactive storage facility, it's their own damn fault. Usually neighborhoods disclose that sort of thing, and in some cases, the government offers to compensate citizens if they feel the facility is interfering with their health.

Also, nuclear power plants themselves are required to be built away from residential areas, usually outside a three-mile radius.

You'd make a good lawyer. :yay:
 
I'm sad that he won't run as the Libertarian candidate, but I understand that it's best that he at least keeps his congressional seat. I'm still voting for him on Tuesday. :up:
 
He's just scaling it back a bit, waiting to make his next move. Not to mention he wants to secure his Congressional seat, so he's basically going to be running two campaigns at once.

I still wish he'd go 3rd party, though.
 
He would be much better off as a 3rd part candidate.
 
LMAO@ a presidential candidate starting his message with "Whoa!"

This dude started off like Keanu Reeves and ended like a Stan Lee editorial taking about "Onward and Upward!". I was looking for him to drop an "Excelsior!" out this mutha****a lol
 
He's just scaling it back a bit, waiting to make his next move. Not to mention he wants to secure his Congressional seat, so he's basically going to be running two campaigns at once.

I still wish he'd go 3rd party, though.

He's better focus solely on his Congressional campaign, because interior polls have shown his primary challenger to have taken a pretty big edge in early polls. That's surprising considering his popularity in the district. Paul also doesn't have a lot of money which can be used in his primary. If he wants to use funds from his Presidential campaign, he'll have to drop out entirely... and that could happen before the Texas primary.
 
I have just lost all respect for Glenn Beck. I use to be a big fan of his; but that is now lost.

He constantly preaching about how there is no candidate and/or what Gov should do about immigration, our monetary problem, the Constitution, and the deficit. He is touting the VERY same thing that Ron Paul has been saying for 7 months in his campaign; yet, on a number of occasions, Glenn Beck ridicules Ron Paul for even having the audacity to run for President in the Republican Primary, yet alone his platform.

Whelther one believes Paul had no shot isn't the point. Paul did everything that was ask of him in QUALIFYING to run in the Republican Primary. Most commentators and pundits hate Paul for his Constitutionist message. That should tell everyone something about the level of propaganda the U.S. Media has against the Constitution and the Rights of the People.

:mad:
 
Cool... now only if you did some research to add to that......

Niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiice........go play in another yard.....:cwink:
 
I have just lost all respect for Glenn Beck. I use to be a big fan of his; but that is now lost.

He constantly preaching about how there is no candidate and/or what Gov should do about immigration, our monetary problem, the Constitution, and the deficit. He is touting the VERY same thing that Ron Paul has been saying for 7 months in his campaign; yet, on a number of occasions, Glenn Beck ridicules Ron Paul for even having the audacity to run for President in the Republican Primary, yet alone his platform.

Whelther one believes Paul had no shot isn't the point. Paul did everything that was ask of him in QUALIFYING to run in the Republican Primary. Most commentators and pundits hate Paul for his Constitutionist message. That should tell everyone something about the level of propaganda the U.S. Media has against the Constitution and the Rights of the People.

:mad:


But maybe Ron Paul has more things that concern Beck, than things that Beck likes. If they agree on one issue, maybe that issue is not enough. What's wrong with that?
 
Ron Paul's new book "The Revolution: A Manifesto" is currently the best-selling book on Amazon.com, and it was released yesterday. It's sold more copies than other bestsellers have in months.

http://www.amazon.com/Revolution-Manifesto-Ron-Paul/dp/0446537519/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1209691254&sr=1-1

I got my copy yesterday, and it truly is an incredible read. Here is my review for it on Amazon.com:

It absolutely thrills me to see that this very important piece of literature is currently the best-selling book on Amazon.com. It gives me hope that a real revolution for the values we once stood for is possible, and that is in fact at our doorstep.

The time is now. Without a doubt in my heart, I firmly believe it is time to finally make a stand and prove once more to the world what truly makes America the last best hope for all of mankind. It is time once more that we set an example and bestow to the world the truths of freedom and the inherent greatness that comes with that God-given blessing. Like we did in 1776, it will happen again, and a revolt in the name of freedom must start, and it must start now.

Ron Paul, undoubtedly the most principled and courageous public servant this nation has been blessed to have in the past fifty years has started something that the pages of history will most certainly remember. He has planted the seeds with his Presidential campaign, and it is with this book that the fresh roots of freedom have begun to reach deep into the soil. The Revolution is eye-opening and easy to understand, perfect for those who know in their soul that something is wrong with America and that it needs to be corrected but do not know how. Congressman Paul quite efficiently presents the same case for individual freedom our Founding Fathers did, and he presents it well, using his experience in Congress and his general knowledge of political philosophy to back up his argument. He makes it quite clear that really the only way to true freedom is through limited government and a halt to our country’s passage down a long and dark corridor that only ends in doom. Through the abolition of the needless and corrupt Federal Reserve. Through the end of needless and tragically wasteful wars that only fulfill the elite's imperial globalist agenda. Through the use of responsible governance, and careful checks on the centralization of power which will inevitably undermine the freedom we as Americans enjoy. And with a return to the sound ideas, principles, and values that our Founding Fathers gave to us in the Constitution. These things will make this country great once more.

With that said, please buy this book. Buy more than one and give it to friends and family. It is truly through education that the roots of liberty can grow and blossom into the Second American Revolution we as Americans have a sacred duty to wage. It is in our own Declaration of Independence that this duty is entrusted, "that whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness."

It is time we turn away from the nationalist definition of "patriot" that has been crammed down our throat by the elitists who own both the government and the mass media. A true patriot is one who is concerned with his people, not his government. One who will do whatever is necessary to ensure that what is best for his people is obtained, and if that means dissent from the tyranny and corruption from a government that deprives his people of the rights of freedom, then it must be done.

Within each of us there is a sleeping dormant fire. Instilled in us by our Founding Fathers and the articles and ideas they left to history and to us, this flame has been quietly submerged over time in the murky waters of ignored corruption and tyranny. But it has not drowned, nor will it ever. It is a part of us, as much as our hands are and as much as our hearts are. And while it can be hidden, it can be dimmed for a while; it is inextinguishable. The burning beauty of the rebellious American patriot still lives within us all and it hungers for it to be known once more. There will be a day of reckoning. There will be a day in which these bold flames of liberty will burn brightly once more for all the world to see.

Long Live the Republic! Death to the New World Order! Liberty Shall Prevail!

Let the Revolution begin.
 
Should be an interesting read.......I'll have to pick it up.
 

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