Is this guy for real?


Taking another unconventional stand, Kentucky's 
Republican Senate nominee Rand Paul criticized 
President Barack Obama's handling of the Gulf oil 
spill Friday as putting "his boot heel on the 
throat of BP" and "really un-American."  [...]

"What I don't like from the president's administration 
is this sort of, 'I'll put my boot heel on the throat 
of BP,'" Paul said in an interview with ABC's "Good 
Morning America." "I think that sounds really 
un-American in his criticism of business."


Well, sure. Because BP is a blameless victim.

Rand really is the gift that keeps on giving ... barely three days since he won 
the nomination and he's come out in favor of allowing discrimination based on 
skin color, in opposition of the Fair Housing Act and the Americans With 
Disabilities Act.

Links here: 
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2010/5/21/868540/-KY-Sen:-Paul-calls-criticism-of-BP-un-American


MORE on Rand Paul 
- by Joe Klein

The latest--an update from Michael Scherer's smart post below--is that Rand 
Paul is now saying that he regrets the appearance with Rachel Maddow, not the 
ridiculous statements he made in favor of a private business's ability to 
discriminate according to race.

I suspect that this will be the first of many such disasters for the Tea Party 
libertarians. They are about to find themselves faced with actual political 
rivals who will be more than happy to expose the utopian foolishness of their 
ideology.

This will be a rare moment of public education for an electorate that
doesn't pay sufficient attention to even the most important aspects of
democracy.

If Democrats play their cards right, by November most Americans will
know that Medicare is government health care,

that social security is a government pension service,

that all the bank bailout money either has been paid back or will be
covered by a modest tax on too-big-to-fail banks,

that the Obama stimulus package mostly consisted of tax cuts for them
and support for necessary local government functions like schools and cops--

and that the jobs-creating aspects of the stimulus package have been
remarkably free of corruption.

If the Republicans play their cards right, they will step away from the brink 
and recognize that a certain don't-tread-on-me libertarian spirit has always 
been close to the heart of the American dream, but that libertarian extremism 
has always been a loser--and that even Ronald Reagan found that he couldn't put 
a dent in the liberal social safety net because it was too popular.

Most extremist moments in American politics are passing fevers. Glenn Beck's 
ratings are down; his paranoid act is wearing thin. Balance
will eventually be restored--which, in this case, will probably mean
fewer Democrats in Congress (because their 2010 levels were unnaturally high, 
given past history), but it will also mean that more Republicans will 
understand the downside of demagogic extremism.

http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2010/05/20/more-on-rand-paul/





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