Ron Paul is Scary, But Those That Cheer Him Are Even Scarier - by
Earl Ofari Hutchinson / Posted January 3, 2008 | 10:57 AM (EST)


The scariest thing about no hope GOP presidential contender Ron Paul
is not his fringe, odd ball racial views. It's not that he polls in
single digits in all national polls and has zilch of a chance to get
the nomination. It's not that at times the GOP candidates sound just
as racially isolationist as he does. It's certainly not that he will
wow a national audience with his trademark shoot-from-the-lip zingers
even if ABC and Fox recants in a moment of compassion and dumps him
back in a seat in their January 6 televised GOP New Hampshire
presidential debate.

The scariest thing about Paul is that even though only a few hard
core Paul backers will waste a vote on him, millions more seem to
agree that his off beat views, especially on race matters, make
sense. They even stand logic as high as it get can go on its head to
defend their leader against all comers. That's especially true when
it comes to Paul's views on race and ethnic politics. That's not a
small point given the open but more often sneaky role that race and
ethnicity will increasingly play in the presidential derby.
Democratic presidential contenders Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton,
John Edwards and Bill Richardson have pulled out all stops to woo and
court blacks, Latinos and Asian voters. They have made poverty,
affordable health care, immigration reform, and job protections the
linchpins of their campaigns.

Paul and the GOP candidates have done just the opposite. They duck,
dodge, and deny racial issues. The only departure from their racial
blind eye is to fan anti-immigrant flames. Paul has gone one better.
In an ad, he demanded that students from alleged terrorist countries
should be denied visas into the U.S. Paul offered not a shred of
proof that there are hordes of students pouring into America to
commit terrorist acts. The ad was more than just a cheap ploy to fan
terrorism fears. This reinforced the worst in racial and religious
stereotyping and negative typecasting. The stereotype is that any one
in America with a non-white face and is a Muslim is a terrorist.

Then there's Paul's now infamous slavery quip that he made on Meet
the Press. Paul claimed the Civil War was an unnecessary bloodbath
that could and should have been avoided. All Lincoln had to do was
buy the slaves. Other slave promoting countries, asserts Paul, didn't
fight wars and they ended slavery peacefully. Paul's historical
dumbness would have been laughable except for four things. One, he
was dead wrong. Lincoln twice made offers to the slave owners to buy
the slaves. They turned him down flat. The countries that freed the
slaves without war, presumably France and England, unlike the U.S.,
did not practice slavery in their countries. And France did fight a
war-- Napoleon's ill-fated invasion of Haiti to put down the slave
revolt there.

Two, he's running for president and has a national platform to spout
his wrong-headed views (Meet the Press!). Three, he's done and said
stuff like this many times before. Among the choice Paulisms are that
blacks are criminally inclined, political dumb bells, and chronic
welfare deadbeats. There was also the alleged Paul hobnob with a
noted white supremacist. Here's what Paul on his campaign website
ronpaul2008.com has to say about race. In fact he even highlights
this as "Issue: Racism" on the site. "Government as an institution is
particularly ill-suited to combat bigotry." In other words, the 1954
landmark Supreme Court's Brown vs. Board of education school
desegregation decision, the 1964 and 1968 Civil Rights Acts, the 1965
Voting Rights Act, and legions of court decisions and state laws that
bar discrimination are worthless. Worse, says Paul, they actually
promote bigotry by dividing Americans into race and class.

Paul's cure for racial bigotry is to change people's hearts. Whew!!
The ghosts of Barry Goldwater, Strom Thurmond, the unreconstructed
George Wallace, and packs of Southern States Righters and Citizens
Councils big shots would lustily cheer Paul on that one. They railed
for decades against the federal government's lift of even the tiniest
finger to protect black rights and lives. Their stock line was that
race relations can only change when hearts change. If we waited for
that to happen the "whites only" signs would still be dangling
prominently from every toilet and school house door in the South.

Paul's views are a corn ball blend of libertarianism, know-nothing
Americanism, and ultra conservative laissez faire limited government.
This marks him as a type A American political quirk.

Now there's the fourth reason not to laugh at Paul. And this is
really what makes him scary. There are apparently millions that don't
see a darn thing wrong with any of this and pillory anyone who does.
They are even scarier than him. Maybe ABC and Fox should let Paul
crash the New Hampshire debate. It's always good to see an extremist
publicly confirm just how scary he and those that cheer him on really
are.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. His
forthcoming book is The Ethnic Presidency: How Race Decides the Race
to the White House (Middle Passage Press, February, 2007).






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