Ron Paul, age 72, is a very mixed bag. He's a 10th-term Republican congressman from Texas and a physician. He also ran for president in the 1988 presidential election as the nominee for the Libertarian Party, while remaining a registered Republican.
He supports:
* free trade
* lower taxes
* reduced government spending
* smaller government
* states' rights
* national sovereignty
* a non-interventionist foreign policy
* reduced legal immigration
* tighter border security
* gun ownership
* free speech
* withdrawal from NATO and the United Nations
* abolition of the Internal Revenue Service and the federal income tax
* the military "don't ask, don't tell" policy
* voluntary school prayer
* a return to free market health care
* a return to the gold standard
He opposes:
* abortion, but supports allowing each state to decide whether to allow or prohibit abortion, instead of the federal government
* capital punishment
* membership in NAFTA and the WTO
* the REAL ID Act
* universal health care
* the federal War on Drugs
* federal regulation of marriage
* foreign interventionism
* foreign aid
* same-sex adoption
* illegal immigration, birthright citizenship and amnesty
* federal control over education, instead favoring local and state level control
* Roe v. Wade, saying it was unconstitutional and should be overturned
He voted
* against the USA PATRIOT Act, the Iraq War Resolution, and the Military Commissions Act of 2006
* for the Authorization for Use of Military Force, which resulted in the War in Afghanistan in 2001
* "yes" on the Secure Fence Act of 2006
He introduced
* the "Sanctity of Life Act of 2005," a bill that would have both defined human life to begin at conception, and removed jurisdiction over abortion prohibitions from the federal courts. Defining embryos and fetuses as persons would have caused abortion to be treated as murder and would outlaw stem cell research and some contraception and fertility treatments.
* the "We the People Act," which, if made law, would forbid federal courts (including the Supreme Court) from hearing cases on subjects such as the display of religious text and imagery on government property, abortion, sexual practices, and same-sex marriage; would make federal court decisions on those subjects non-binding as precedent in state courts; and would forbid federal courts from spending any money to enforce their judgments.
See Wikipedia,
Ron Paul.
Too far out there on too many issues for me, folks. On to the next candidate.