This stuff gets more and more bizarre. Back in 2008 all I knew was  RP's 
economic views.
Maybe a little of this other material, but not much. Now we can see how  
deep this gets.
 
About his newsletter, unless he had a big staff, which seems doubtful,  
probably more like
4 or 5 people, then RP knew every word that was published.  Its the  nature 
of the animal.
Small newsletters  are almost all ideological or specialty  professional. 
Not counting the
ones sent by businesses and churches, etc. The private ones do not get  
published unless
someone is a missionary for some Great Cause and spends money on the  
project.
Then, with $$ on the table, he wants every word to reflect his views. 
 
I am surprised ( not ) at how poorly TV is dealing with the story, even  
Sanjay Gupta
although his has been the best so far. A lot of belaboring the obvious  and 
overlooking
the substance at the level of revealing details. Still, I can't see how the 
 GOP establishment
can let this go on, with Paul on a roll. Even if he was an economic genius, 
 which is
anything but the case, all this other stuff is positively lethal  
politically.
 
The Left is waking up to how much they can benefit from this story. As they 
 see it,
the story is a large pile of doo-doo  and it would be ever so much fun  to
rub Republican noses in it.
 
What is going on behind the scenes in Iowa ?  Another one of  those
it-would-be-terrific-to-be-a-fly-on-the-wall  and   listen-in  times.
 
Billy
 
 
===================================
 
 
12/22/2011 9:38:11 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, [email protected]  
writes:

The John Birch Society 2.0 (maybe 3.0), is mostly  an anti-UN, anti-illegal 
immigration organization now. He's no fan of gays?  Uncharacteristic of 
most Libertarians with "mind your own business" stances  being all the rage. 

Andrew Sullivan is a "Trig Truther" (Bristol Palin  is the real mother of 
Trig Palin), and really has no room to throw bricks at  "9/11 Truther" Paul. 
More like Birds of a feather... However, Sullivan is gay,  and if Paul 
really hates gays then this is an inexplicable endorsement.   

Lots of things don't make sense here, but then again, Andrew Sullivan  is 
involved... So there. :-)  

David 

  _   
 
“A society that does  not recognize that each individual has values of his 
own which he is entitled  to follow can have no respect for the dignity of 
the individual and cannot  really know freedom.”—Fredrich August von Hayek  



On 12/22/2011 12:06  PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  
Not in the article, but very much in CNN reports, RP criticized Reagan  for
approving the MLK holiday --which he characterized as "Hate Whitey  Day"
 
BR note
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------
 
 
 
New Republic
 
Why Don’t Libertarians Care About Ron Paul’s Bigoted Newsletters?

    *   _ 
James Kirchick
_ (http://www.tnr.com/article/politics/98811/ron-paul-libertarian-bigotry#) 
 
 
James Kirchick
Assistant Editor



    *   December 22, 2011 

 
 
Nearly four years ago, on the eve of the New Hampshire Republican  
presidential primary, The New Republic published _my expose_ 
(http://www.tnr.com/article/politics/angry-white-man?passthru=NjNkZTVlNTQ4OWUyMzllYWEzOTg3ZWQ2MDI4Yz
AzYTc)  of newsletters  published by Texas Congressman Ron Paul. The 
contents of these newsletters  can best be described as appalling. Blacks were 
referred to as “animals.”  Gays were told to go “back” into the “closet.” 
The “X-Rated Martin Luther  King” was a bisexual pedophile who “seduced 
underage girls and boys.” Three  months before the Oklahoma City bombing, Paul 
praised right-wing,  anti-government militia movements as “one of the most 
encouraging  developments in America.” The voluminous record of bigotry and 
conspiracy  theories speaks for itself. 
And yet, four years on, Ron Paul’s star is undimmed. Not only do the  
latest polls place him as the frontrunner in the Iowa Caucuses, but he still  
enjoys the support of a certain coterie of professional political  commentators 
who, like Paul himself, identify as libertarians. Most  prominent among 
them is Daily Beast blogger Andrew Sullivan, who gave  Paul his _endorsement_ 
(http://andrewsullivan.thedailybeast.com/2011/12/ron-paul-for-the-gop-nominati
on.html)  in the GOP  primary last week, as he did in 2008. But he is not 
alone: Tim Carney of  The Washington Examiner recently _bemoaned_ 
(http://campaign2012.washingtonexaminer.com/article/gop-will-take-gloves-if-ron-paul-win
s-iowa/264111)  the fact that  “the principled, antiwar, 
Constitution-obeying, Fed-hating, libertarian  Republican from Texas stands 
firmly outside the 
bounds of permissible  dissent as drawn by either the Republican 
establishment or the mainstream  media,” while Conor Friedersdorf of The 
Atlantic 
_argues_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/12/pretending-that-ron-paul-doesnt-matter-wont-make-him-go-away/250035/)
  that Paul’s ideas  
cannot be ignored, and that, for Tea Party Republicans, “A vote against Paul  
requires either cognitive dissonance—never in short supply in politics—or a  
fundamental rethinking of the whole theory of politics that so recently  
drove the Tea Party movement.” 
To be sure, these figures, like the broader group of Paul enthusiasts,  don’
t base their support on the Congressman’s years-long record of  supporting 
racism, homophobia, anti-Semitism, and far-right militias. Quite  the 
opposite: Like the candidate himself, they manage to mostly avoid making  any 
mention of his unsavory record at all. It’s an impressive feat of  repression, 
one that says volumes about the type of enthusiasm Paul  inspires. 
Ultimately, Paul’s following is closely linked with the peculiar  
attractions of the libertarian creed that he promotes. Libertarianism is an  
ideology 
rather than a philosophy of government—its main selling point is  not its 
pragmatic usefulness, but its inviolable consistency. In that way,  Paul’s 
indulgence of bigotry—he says he did not write the  newsletters but rather 
allowed others to do so in his name—isn’t an  incidental departure from his 
libertarianism, but a tidy expression of its  priorities: First principles of 
market economics gain credence over all  considerations of social empathy 
and historical acuity. His fans are guilty  of donning the same ideological 
blinders, giving their support to a  political candidate on account of the 
theories he declaims, rather than the  judgment he shows in applying those 
theories, or the character he has  evinced in living them. Voters for Ron Paul 
are privileging logical  consistency at the expense of moral fitness. 
But it’s not simply that Paul’s supporters are ignoring the manifest  
evidence of his moral failings. More fundamentally, their very  awareness of 
such failings is crowded out by the atmosphere of  outright fervor that 
pervades Paul’s candidacy. This is not the fervor of a  healthy body 
politic—this 
is a less savory type of political devotion, one  that escapes the bounds of 
sober reasoning. Indeed, Paul’s absolutist notion  of libertarian rigor has 
always been coupled with an attraction to fantasies  of political 
apocalypse. 
A constant theme in Paul’s rhetoric, dating back to his first years as a  
congressman in the late 1970s, is that the United States is on the edge of a  
precipice. The centerpiece of this argument is that the abandonment of the  
gold standard has put the United States on the path to financial collapse.  
Over the years, Paul has added other potential catastrophes to his  
repertoire of dark premonitions. In the early 1990s, it was racial  apocalypse, 
with Paul dispensing “survivalist” tips to the readers of his  newsletter like 
the admonition to stock up on guns and construct fall-out  shelters. More 
recently, he has argued that America’s foreign policy was a  “major 
contributing factor” to the terrorist attacks of 9/11, an argument  that has 
earned 
him admiration from some liberals. The 2008 financial  crisis, the Obama 
administration’s continuation of many Bush anti-terror  policies (and the 
launching of the Libya War), and the formation of the Tea  Party have all 
boosted 
Paul’s image as a prescient sage. 
And so it’s not hard to see why Paul’s more ardent supporters stand by  
him: They too find it seductive to believe  that the United States is  on the 
verge of utter collapse. The benefit of indulging in such visions is  that 
it sets the stage for the arrival of a savior: This is the role that  Paul 
himself plays, of course. Fiercely independent, uncorrupted by the  “
establishment,” speaker of unpopular truths, only Paul is capable of saving  
the 
country. What are a handful of uncouth newsletters really worth when the  
stakes 
are so high? 
What’s important to realize is that this sort of political myopia is  
endemic to libertarianism. The movement’s obsession with consistency is  
actually 
a mark of paranoia. If you’re already persuaded by Paul’s  suggestions 
that fiat money is what ails our economy, that our country’s  foreign policy is 
rotten to its very core, it’s tempting to take the next  step and interpret 
his failure to be nominated as the result of political  persecution. 
Sullivan, thus, complains of a deliberate media blackout  against the Texas 
Congressman, blaming “liberals who cannot take domestic  libertarianism 
seriously 
and from neocons desperate to keep the Military  Industrial Complex humming 
at Cold War velocity.” There is a bitter irony of  course in the fact that a 
movement so devoted to individual responsibility  is so apt to be on the 
search for others to blame. Paul of course is the  prime example: Here is an 
absolutist libertarian who advocates the ideals of  individual rights and 
responsibility, yet cannot own up to the words that  were published under his 
name, instead blaming it on a variety of as yet  unnamed aides. 
Some Paul supporters acknowledge the newsletters but dismiss them as “old  
news,” arguing that there is no trace of the racist and conspiratorial ideas 
 he promoted for decades in his speeches today on the campaign trail. But  
while it’s true that Paul has not said anything explicitly racist in public, 
 the same cannot be said for his promotion of conspiracy theories. He 
appears  regularly on the radio program of Alex Jones, perhaps the most popular 
 
conspiracy theorist in America (_profiled_ 
(http://www.tnr.com/article/politics/truther-consequences)  by TNR in  2009), 
where he often indulges the host
’s delusional ravings about the  coming “New World Order.” He continues to 
associate with the John Birch  Society, the extreme-right wing organization 
that William F. Buckley  denounced in the early 1960’s after it alleged 
that none other than  President Dwight D. Eisenhower was a “dedicated, 
conscious agent of the  Communist conspiracy.” Asked about the group in 2007, 
Paul 
_told_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/22/magazine/22Paul-t.html?scp=1&sq=Oh,%20my%20goodness,%20the%20John%20Birch%20Society!%20Is%20that%20bad?&st=cse)
 
 the New York  Times, “Oh, my goodness, the John Birch Society! Is that 
bad? I  have a lot of friends in the John Birch Society.” Indeed, Paul 
_delivered_ 
(http://www.jbs.org/birchtube/viewvideo/1007/constitution/ron-paul-at-the-50th-anniversary-of-jbs)
  the keynote  address at the organization’s 50th 
anniversary dinner in September. In May,  Paul _said_ 
(http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/05/12/ron-paul-ordered-bin-laden-raid/)  
President Obama’s  
order to execute Osama bin Laden “was absolutely not necessary.” This  
statement earned a rebuke from Judson Phillips, founder of Tea Party Nation,  a 
movement one would presume would be quite favorable to Paul. “If  there is 
any doubt that Ron Paul should not even get near the Oval Office,  even on a 
tour of the White House,” Phillips said, “he has just revealed  it.” 
If Paul is responsible for conjuring the apocalyptic atmosphere of a  
prophet, it’s his supporters who have to answer for submitting to it.  Surely, 
those who agree with Paul would be able to find a better vessel for  their 
ideas than a man who once entertained the notion that AIDS was  invented in a 
government laboratory or who, just last January, alleged that  there had been 
a “CIA coup” against the American government and that the  Agency is “in 
drug businesses.” Why, for instance, do these self-styled  libertarians not 
throw their support to former New Mexico Governor Gary  Johnson, who, unlike 
Paul, can boast executive experience and doesn’t have  the racist and 
conspiratorial baggage? At this late stage, that Ron Paul’s  supporters haven’t 
found an alternative candidate says more about them, and  the intellectual 
milieu they inhabit, than it does about the erstwhile  publisher of racist 
newsletters.
-- 
Centroids: The  Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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Radical  Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 

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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community  
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Google Group: _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
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Radical  Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 



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