An Argument for Paul

Every candidate negatives; it is no secret that Ron Paul has his. He has the obvious one; he is fighting an uphill battle running in the GOP as libertarian. In addition, he is on in his years and has the charisma of jagged broken glass. The GOP base loves his domestic policy but cannot stand his foreign policy. Nonetheless, after 20 some years of running for president, it looks like he may at least win the first two primaries. He is holding the steady lead in Iowa is and cleaning up in New Hampshire. This is for the other states primary goers who are still dead set against Paul.

About Those Newsletters

If there was one thing Paul had going for him, it was his reputation as being squeaky clean. There was no flip-flopping or Tiffany’s accounts in his past to muddy the waters. As his gains seemed to be legitimate, the GOP machine went digging for some dirt in an attempt to turn the tides onto one of their chosen candidates, and in doing so came across some awful newsletters baring Paul’s name.

Some have pointed out that Paul could have profited up to one million dollars on the newsletters. While I have not seen an evidence to lend evidence to this claim, even if it were true, I am not sure that should matter. After all, Paul is a self-described capitalist and anyone who is concerned with the GOP primary ought to be as well, so the concern of the profit is thrown out. Now, it is no secret that these were written by Lew Rockwell and Paul has addressed them in the past; this time however he got all senile and retorted that he had not written them. If had just taken responsibility, and brushed them off nonchalantly it would never have mattered. We all know the other candidates have far worse things in their mcmansion sized closets, and since republican politics is often about the lesser of two evils, I would have found a way to make it about the other guys and their problems.

That Icky Foreign Policy

I like pieces of Ron Paul’s foreign policy. I like the idea of ending foreign aid and getting rid of our bases on other countries and bringing our troops home from all the entanglements were are currently engaged in. I for one like what Obama did to kill UBL. To heck with international law, to heck with Pakistan, we found our man and we clipped him. That’s America and Pakistan should know that if the hold a guy we want dead then were will trespass wherever the heck we dang well please to send him to the virgins.

Ron Paul is nothing if not a man of principle.  So his crazy notions of isolationism would not go far in congress, that whole thing about checks and balances is starting to make sense, isn’t it? Yes, we are surely guaranteed some gridlock, but that is better than the extremes both sides offer. If we must go to war, it will be done the constitutional way and that seems to a notion that most humans like.

Like I said, every candidate has their drawbacks. Most of Ron Paul’s policy drawbacks would get checked by another branch of government making them a non-issue. As to those newsletters that Lew Rockwell wrote – well at least he didn’t create the system that underpins obamacare, flip-flop on social issues when it suited his political advancement. Nor did he vote to create ANWR, the Federal Department of Education, or sit on a couch with Nancy Pelosi and talk about how concerned he is about global warming. Sure, Dick Morris and Karl Rove call him a liberal, but that is simply because they realize that a Paul presidency would put an end to the shenanigans they engage in that make themselves rich at the expense of the taxpayer. Not to mention the fact that most of Paul’s stances are common sense and they cannot combat them with their arsenal of weapons, so they just call him liberal. Its the conservative equivalent of calling someone racist. After all, do we want a guy like Karl Rove dictating who we are allowed to have as our candidate? Is that not why we have the primary process? As for Dick Morris, I am not sure the lisper cares what happens so long as he can plug his new book, whatever it happens to be called.

Vote Paul or America dies, it is just that simple.

Chris Fields Interview

My first ever interview with a candidate?

Would you vote for him if he was running in your district? How was I as an interviewer? Can he win? DISCUSS!

Cain is Gone, but 9-9-9 Can Stay

Cain is on his way out, but I hope remnants of his tax plan stay with us. No other plan offered attacks our highly discriminatory system and creates equality in taxation much like the oh-so memorable 9-9-9 would.

His detractors suggest that the plan would magically be increased in the future, however Cain made the salient point that his plan would never increase taxes, rather a politician would. Not acting because some future politician may or may not increase the rate of taxes is not a valid reason not to at least consider the benefits of his plan.

First off, I will say I take issue with the corporate tax. Perhaps it shows how DC Herman Cain really is; of all people a businessman like him ought to know that corporate taxes are just passed on to the consumer. That’s why when other presidential hopefuls criticized the plan for creating a new sales tax I knew none of them would be the fix America needs right now. How can any of them claim to remotely understand what plagues our economy if they cannot understand the simplest of taxation principles? This would eliminate the hidden nature of government and taxes and make it very real to consumers just how expensive big government can be. I think his opponents were just mad they did not come up with something so simple and so catchy before he did. Oh well.

I think a plan more like 15-15 would work better; a 15% tax on all goods and a 15% tax on all income. That is right, all income.  Everyone, even the “poor” would be included in my plan, and that would insure the plan would never change. No self-interested politician (is there any other kind?) would dare hike up the rate because of the toll it would take on the poor. I would suggest this plan until America is all caught up on its debt, and then I would trim it to a single 15% national tax on all goods, no exceptions, write-offs, credits or waivers. Everyone must pay. When everyone is included in a tax plan, it shackles the hands of future politicians.

Podcast

Glenn Beck’s Wal-Mart Key Chain

Whats this? Glenn Beck sells key chains at my local Wal-Mart? These are not exactly his, nor are the terms exclusively Beck’s but I cannot help but think that he is not responsible for the modern resurgence of the three ideas. Okay, maybe it has nothing to do with Glenn Beck at all, but I am going to give him the credit. How many of you own your very own network? That is what I thought.

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