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Ron Paul (Republican)Get Rating Widget!

Overall Rating:3.00 based on 17 ratings
ItemImageRon Paul, born August 20, 1935 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S. Representative from Texas. On January 11, 2007, Paul filed papers to form an exploratory committee for a presidential run in 2008. This will increase his fundraising opportunities until his presumed eventual anouncement. This first step of running for the Republican nomination is significant because he is not running as a Libertarian like he did nearly two decades ago. Paul has the distinction of being opposed to the Iraq War and the interventionist nature of US foreign policy. He is one of 7 Republican congressman who voted against Iraq War authorization in 2003. He has also opposed George W. Bush and the majority of Republican congressmen on many other issues, including the PATRIOT Act. His maverick record on these issues means he may draw support from some surprising circles, including antiwar activists and paleoconservatives.

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Reviews for Ron Paul (Republican)  1-12 OF 12

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James76255 (17)
02/10/2008
It's feast or famine with Paul. He's a pretty standard Libertarian, and like any Libertarian I look at his stance on some issues and like what I see very much but cringe when I see others. He's a little nuttier than Harry Browne, a little less nutty than Michael Badnarik. It's pretty obvious he won't win the Republican nomination, but if he runs as a candidate for the Libertarian Party (not sure if that would effect his place as a representative) I have not totally ruled out the possibility of voting for him, though it's unlikely.

  (1 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree)
Loerke (46)
01/11/2008

UPDATE -- SOME SECOND THOUGHTS:

Ron Paul is not afraid to think in abstractions -- if we can be grateful to him for anything, it should be that we won't hear him bullsh&tting us about how when he met Mr. & Mrs. Such-and-Such on the campaign trail, he was moved to rethink his social outlook, etc. He brings real principles to the discussion, an admirable quality in an elected figure. Principles can also be bulldozers, to both good and bad effect: what allows Paul to attack a destructive and fruitless war in Iraq also leads him to attack the safety net preventing the aged from sinking into abject poverty. Many admirers see this as a mark of Ron Paul's toughness or willing to make sacrifices in the name of his principles, but they tend to overlook the fact that perhaps the problem is that his principles are not very complex or well thought-through. The lack of coherence is the case with Ron Paul's principles, and with libertarian principles generally, though it is not unique to this brand of thought.

I should have noticed this incoherence before, but it became blatantly obvious during yesterday's news frenzy over Ron Paul's old newsletters, which contained some offensive language about race. I was astonished to see Paul respond to the controversy like every other unprincipled politician, trying to lie his way out of it, asserting that he didn't write and in fact hadn't even read the mailings that went out under the title of The Ron Paul Newsletter -- a preposterous assertion for a small-time candidate who likely had few staff and was appealing to a mostly local constituency. The real story here, though, wasn't the assertions contained in the newsletters, which weren't all that shockingly horrible; they reflect what many Republicans think and continue to think, and would not be out of place coming from the mouth of a Newt Gingrich. The real story wasn't the lies Paul used to deny the facts. The real story was that Paul demonstrated that he was an intellectual lightweight in talking about racism. In his CNN interview, Paul got into a feverishly ungrammatical state of agitation, making such claims as "Libertarians are incapable of being a a racist [sic] because racism is a collectivist idea: you see people in groups. A civil libertarian like myself see everybody as important individual ... "

The idea that Paul is "the anti-racist," as he dubbed himself, because libertarians allegedly don't "see" race is the biggest crock I've heard from a political figure in years. In order to be anti-racist, your first step obviously has to be to admit that you see race. To assert otherwise is to substitute a shallow principle for the human fact. Paul was not just lying about his past, but deceiving himself. Not only that, he demonstrated how hollow the philosophy of libertarianism is.

Now, Ron Paul isn't all bad. He did say the most true and meaningful thing in this presidential campaign yet: his observation that Mike Huckabee is an example of how, quoting Sinclair Lewis, "when fascism comes to this country, it will be wrapped in the flag, carrying a cross." But Paul still needs to admit that libertarianism isn't innocent of evangelism itself. It's a faith, too -- a blind one.

ORIGINAL POST (8/14/07): I love this guy. He's a principled libertarian who would do away with half of the government. He's the equivalent of Christy Mihos, the independent in our recent Massachusetts gubernatorial election, a quasi-ex-Repub who became the scourge of the GOP candidate and came astonishingly close to her at the polls. Intellectually, though not practically, I'm with him. Alas, practical is what supporting this guy is not: he has no chance.


  (7 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree)
Ken21Allen (0)
01/07/2008
While the Democrats wish to run full speed into a new socialistic, big brother, big government America, the Republicans tag along right behind them, only at a slower pace.
Ron Paul ts the statesman who will turn the bus around and make a beline for the constitution.

  (1 voted this helpful, 2 funny and 0 agree)
hopefull (0)
12/31/2007
Best for the people candidate

  (2 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree)
deadman2664 (0)
12/01/2007
Ron Paul is the only candidate that can save this nation and fight the globalists among us who are seeking to destroy our country. Ron Paul is the only person in congress who has been true to his oath of office. Ron Paul will restore our republic and overturn the decades of executive orders that have removed The Constitution as law of the land!!! say no to the patriot act, say no to the coming national id card, say no to the U N, say no to unconstitutional "wars", say no to tyranny in America, say yes to freedom and liberty, say yes to the ideology that made this country great for 200 years. vote for Ron Paul please.

  (1 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree)
USADude (3)
11/03/2007
Rep. Ron Paul's domestic views make a lot of sense. These views include lower taxes and government spending and re instating the constitution. However, his foreign policy lacks alot of thought and truth.

  (2 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree)
fitman (36)
11/03/2007

His stance against the occupation of Iraq, gun control and the counterproductive war on drugs is a definite plus, and if seniors didn't vote, this guy might have a chance, but Social Security, HUD senior housing assistance and Medicare are all that keep millions of our vulnerable elderly from homelessness and death, and he's determined to abolish all US government social programs, so I doubt he's really in the running.

UPDATE:

During his 30-year career in politics, Paul has made a number of offensive, racist statements in the press and in his personal newsletter, The Ron Paul Political Report, including: * "If you have ever been robbed by a black teen-aged male, you know unbelievably fleet-footed they can be." Victoria Advocate, 5/24/96 * "Given the inefficiencies of what the DC laughably calls the criminal justice system, I think we can safely assume that 95 percent of the black males in that city are semi-criminal or criminal." Victoria Advocate, 5/24/96 * "Opinion polls consistently show that only five percent of blacks have sensible political opinions, i.e. support the free market, individual liberty and the end of welfare and affirmative action." Victoria Advocate, 5/24/96

http://www.stormfront.org/forum/showthread.php/ron-paul-one-388512.html


  (3 voted this helpful, 1 funny and 0 agree)
abichara (60)
09/12/2007
I like Ron Paul. He takes smart, principled stands on many issues, from fiscal policy, the Patriot Act and the War in Iraq. That means that most likely his candidacy might not get nowhere, at least as a Republican. He might run as a libertarian.

Ron Paul will be getting my vote in the Republican primary. He doesn't have a shot, but what the hell. I like what he stands for. He's the only guy out there talking about the important issues; whether it be the state of our financial and monetary systems, our foreign policy, or the issue of civil liberties. And I just happen to agree with many of his points. None of the other 20 or so major party candidates deserve to get a vote of confidence from me anyways.

  (4 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree)
GoinDownSlow (23)
09/12/2007
Nope. Sometimes you need to defend yourself. Patrick Henry he ain't...

  (2 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree)
SilverFox (26)
08/29/2007
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.

  (3 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree)
Victor83 (35)
08/14/2007

Ron Paul gave a great speech on the House floor warning of the dangers of a police state in the U.S. (I think it was in 2003). Needless to say, that rubbed a lot of Republican fur the wrong way. He has never carried water for the Bush/ blue-blood wing of the party. I really like this guy, but the RNC machine will no doubt close ranks on him.

Update: If you truly value the Constitution and the values upon which our great nation was founded, Ron Paul is probably the best of all the candidates- on either side. That said, he stands about as much chance of being Pres as I do.


  (4 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree)
GenghisTheHun (168)
03/02/2007
Ordinarily I would put him squarely on the weird wing of the GOP, but he was only one of seven Republicans in the House to vote against the Iraq War, and he has opposed the Patriot Act as well. He can't be all bad!

  (3 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree)
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