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The Ron Paul Surge?

FreeMarketNews.com is reporting a dramatic surge in post-debate campaign contributions to Ron Paul, putting him in a near-tie with McCain behind Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani. Paul had about $500,000 on hand at the end of March, but sources in his campaign told FMN he now has $3-4 million, and is closing fast on $5 million.

I've sent an email to a Paul staffer asking for confirmation.

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Comments to "The Ron Paul Surge?":

Leif | June 9, 2007, 1:33pm | #

holy shit

Joe Majsterski | June 9, 2007, 1:38pm | #

You mean there's hope? Woohoo!

Nikolaj | June 9, 2007, 1:39pm | #

Nice one!

Sam McManus | June 9, 2007, 1:46pm | #

I hope you guys don't think I'm too into the whole libertarian thing because of this, but this "Ron Paul isn't a chump" stuff gives me hope for the world. Seriously.

Zach | June 9, 2007, 1:52pm | #

This is divine intervention vic.

Matt | June 9, 2007, 2:01pm | #

Whoa.

Bee | June 9, 2007, 2:04pm | #

Heh. I contributed. A little. My first ever political contribution. And ya know what? I might just do it again.

I saw some stat once that showed Paul has a tremendously high percentage of small, out-of-district campaign contributions.

Eric Dondero | June 9, 2007, 2:11pm | #

And the latest Zogby poll now has Paul at 0%, down from a high of 3% in March.

Boy, let's hope that definition of "Surge" is applied to other libertarian hopefuls. We'd be out of existence as a movement in months.

Randolph Carter | June 9, 2007, 2:13pm | #

The only way Paul can get in the white house is if he wins the Republican primary. How to make this happen? Switch your registration to Republican and vote for him! Also try to get elected as a delegate to the RNC, so your vote has more weight...

I'm usually a Public Choice, rational ignorance, non-voter kind of guy, but if people actually vote for him, he might win. Rather than just talking about how he can't win...

Randolph Carter | June 9, 2007, 2:14pm | #

Eric,
"We" doesn't include you. sorry, buddy.

Kwix | June 9, 2007, 2:17pm | #

Hey Eric,
Just think, if Paul is actually elected president you might have a chance, however slim, of winning that House seat.

tomwright | June 9, 2007, 2:23pm | #

I sent $500 to him a couple weeks ago.

In most states I think you can vote in primaries whether you are registered to that party or not, but your registration is switched to that of the party primary you vote in. At least that is how I htink it works here in NJ.

I plan to try to vote for him in the NJ primary, if I can.

Neu Mejican | June 9, 2007, 2:24pm | #

As much as I see the reason Ron Paul is loved by the libertarians, I was interested in the response to this from his positions on his website...

"End birthright citizenship. As long as illegal immigrants know their children born here will be citizens, the incentive to enter the U.S. illegally will remain strong."

Seems at odds with his stated position to base policy on the constitution.

Eric Dondero | June 9, 2007, 2:30pm | #

Hey, whatever happened to all those Ron Paul fanatics screaming a couple weeks ago that he "won the debate" and would soon "surge ahead of the other contenders."

Now he's down in the polls to 0%.

Where are they all now?

Where are all those who said, "Ron Paul kicked Giuliani's ass..."?

Now Giuliani is clearly ahead in all the polls, and now many are claiming he's got a lock on the nomination.

Thanks Ron Paul for boosting up Rudy Giuliani. Sorry it smacked you back down to 0% in the polls. But we True Libertarians appreciate your help for Rudy!

Bill Woolsey | June 9, 2007, 2:31pm | #

http://www.pollingreport.com/wh08rep.htm

This is a list of national poll results. The ones listed here have Paul between 0% and 2% during the last week. 1% looks like the mode result.

Eric Dondero | June 9, 2007, 2:33pm | #

Two MAJOR PUBLICATIONS just called Rudy Giuliani a "libertarian" in the last couple days: US News & World Report, and the Chicago Sun-Times.

US News even headlined their story on Rudy with the word "Libertarian".

Here's a question for ya.

Do you see the media applying the label "libertarian" to any of the other 21 major contendors for President, Dem or Republican?

Gotta be some reason as to why the media applies the label "libertarian" ONLY to Rudy, (save Ron Paul, of course), and not to Fred Thompson, McCain, Romney, Hillary, Tancredo, et.al.

Bill Woolsey | June 9, 2007, 2:35pm | #

I prefer allowing more people to live and work in the U.S. without their children becoming automatic citizens to prohibiting people from living and working here.

Eric Dondero | June 9, 2007, 2:36pm | #

Thanks for the poll numbers Bill.

So where's the "Ron Paul surge"??

Remember 3 weeks ago, when all the Ron Paul fanatics were spamming every Blog and Website on the entire Internet with threats that "Ron Paul kicked Rudy's ass, and will win the
GOP nomination and go on to win the Presidency"?

'Member that?

Where are they all now?

I'd like someone to please explain to me how steady poll numbers since a candidate announced in the range of 0% to 2%, can be called a "Surge"?

Bramblyspam | June 9, 2007, 2:37pm | #

Paul still has no chance of winning. He won't be able to stand up against the smear machines if they start seriously targeting him, and in any event the majority of the GOP voters are still solidly pro-war. As the lone anti-war candidate, Paul will naturally gather a lot of support from a vocal minority - but it remains a clear minority in his party. Eventually the pro-war GOP voters will unite behind one guy. That guy will win the GOP nomination, and it sure as hell won't be Paul.

The best part about Paul's campaign is that it's getting the anti-war/libertarian republicans organized and active. That has potential to transform the republican party, but don't start talking about Paul as the next Goldwater yet. Remember, Goldwater was supported by most of his party, and he won his party's nomination.

For 2008, I think the best we can hope for is that Paul will get enough support to warrant a prime time speaking slot at the republican convention. Now that would be worth watching, if only to see the warbots squirm. It would all slip out of public consciousness within a week, but I'll happily enjoy my momentary pleasures while they last.

In the longer run, I think the best we can hope for is a crushing republican defeat on all levels in 2008, followed by a bloodbath in the GOP. That's the only way I see the republican party turning in a more Paul-like direction. The religious nuts are still solidly entrenched in that party though, I have a hard time seeing how they could get booted out in less than a decade.

For 2008, I think the only way an anti-war candidate can win is if we get a solidly anti-war "unity ticket" candidacy in a 3-way race. I'd love to see it, but I'm not holding my breath.

Randolph Carter | June 9, 2007, 2:38pm | #

Eric,
We're right here. And he did kick Giuliani's ass all over the stage. I'm not going to get in to polling methodology with you, but there are a number of reasons why Paul is underrepresented in the polls, not the least of which is that he's not one of the ordained "big three" candidates yet.
But 5 million dollars in donations, that's something of a show of support, no?
Also, how did you get here from Bizarro World?

Dondero after Giuliani tells us that freedom is submission to arbitrary authority: Me... So... Happy!

Neu Mejican | June 9, 2007, 2:41pm | #

Bill W,

So you support a constitutional amendment?

Fluffy | June 9, 2007, 2:43pm | #

Dondero, you're an idiot. I don't care if the US News and World Report calls Giuliani a fucking gorilla, it doesn't make him one. No sane person considers Giuliani a libertarian, unless the party opened up a "slobbering torturer" wing at some point in the last year. Is that your caucus or something?

crimethink | June 9, 2007, 2:45pm | #

US News even headlined their story on Rudy with the word "Libertarian".

Was the headline "Rudy Giuliani is not a Libertarian"?

Otherwise, they're smoking crack.

miche | June 9, 2007, 2:49pm | #

I'm a 54 year old housewife from the Midwest. I've voted in every Presidential election since I was 20 and I've always voted for the candidate I hated the least. This is the first time I'm voting for a candidate I love. In my mind, Ron Paul is a modern day Thomas Jefferson. He is an "honest" politician...the ultimate oxymoron. God knows we've had a lot of plain morons to deal with; and we're tired of it.

If a man is a liar, nothing… absolutely nothing he says is worth a hill of beans...and our political system has been inundated with liars for decades. They have taken our great nation and driven it into the ground, spiritually, economically and societaly. They have made it an embarrassment (because they themselves are an embarrassment). Just look around when the national anthem is played. People don't hold their hands on their hearts, they show little respect and pride. Our country is reflecting the moral lacking of decades of poor leaders.

Ron Paul will give this country its pride back because we will be a morally responsible leader of the free world, leading by example instead of leading through fear.

Not only will I switch parties to vote for Ron Paul, I'm signing up at my local www.meetup.com group and I'm working on his campaign. I have never offered to work in any political capacity before. Ron Paul is America's last chance to wrest our shredded Constitution from the death spiral the men in Washington (both Democrat and Republican) have put it in.

JEFFREY TROCHELMAN
Saturday, June 09, 2007
[reply] [delete]59 yo and never sent a dime to any politician, however I have donated three times to Dr Paul and will continue to send him my hundred bucks a week. I would rather piss it away on fun stuff but better to give now, then have those SOBs in DC rape me later.
Just two of the many comments on Ron Paul.

http://usaelectionpolls.com/2008/articles/ron-paul-natural-boost.html

miche | June 9, 2007, 2:50pm | #

Should have indicated that the comments were from somewhere before I quoted them. I'm not a 54YO housewife.

Kwix | June 9, 2007, 3:02pm | #

Two MAJOR PUBLICATIONS just called Rudy Giuliani a "libertarian" in the last couple days: US News & World Report, and the Chicago Sun-Times.

US News even headlined their story on Rudy with the word "Libertarian".
Hrrm, I just did a search of the Chicago Sun-Times site and found no mention of "Giuliani" and "libertarian" in the same article. As for US N&WR, the only "Libertarian" mention from the past week was a (apparently now removed) blog entry about "Giuliani's Libertarian Health Care Reform", whatever that fucking means.

Anonymo the Anonymous | June 9, 2007, 3:04pm | #

I hope to God Mr. Dondero's campaign is as annoying as his behavior here.

Jim Bob | June 9, 2007, 3:10pm | #

Romney McRudy could kick Eric Dondero's ass.

Thornton | June 9, 2007, 3:14pm | #

Here is a good piece on why Giuliani is not a libertarian: http://www.nydailynews.com/opinions/2007/05/30/2007-05-30_libertarians_beware_the_rigid_reign_of_r.html

severin | June 9, 2007, 3:16pm | #

I still don't think he stands a chance of getting the nomination, but I like the fact that as a primary candidate he has already gotten more attention than he did as the LP presidential nominee. I also read that gaming sites have changed the odds on his winning the presidency from 100 to 1 to 15 to 1, I think those guys have a better feel for these things than any polling company out there.

Eric Dondero | June 9, 2007, 3:24pm | #

Remember, Rudy Giuliani was mayor of New York or 9/11. 9/11 9/11 9/11

Thornton | June 9, 2007, 3:32pm | #

Eric,

I searched the Zogby site and the latest Republican nomination poll they have is for May 16 2007. Ron Paul is in at 3%, which puts him in 5th place out of 11 candidates listed. I'm not sure what you have been looking at but the polls I see have Dr. Paul gaining support (from none in Jan/Feb to 1-3% now).

I don't understand why you can't see that Rudy is possibly the most UN-libertarian of all the candidates. I would chose anyone on that stage over Rudy. Maybe you should actually check out his record.

LatexSolarBeef | June 9, 2007, 3:34pm | #

Dr. Paul's gonna win.

Wait until you see the first-time-voter numbers come in from the party primaries. Behold, as the unwashed masses commandeer the Republican Party.

tomwright | June 9, 2007, 3:35pm | #

So far as Ron Pauls position on birthright citizenship, I understand that he supports a Constitutional Amendment to change the rules, not just ignoring them as so many have.

I do not know about any of you, but I was once called on a political poll. (years ago when I still had a hardwired line). I was given the choice of the R or D and I said I supported the Libertarian. I do not know what kind of group it was but they kept trying to get me to choose either the R or D candidate until they gave up after a minute or two of questions. I have no idea how they scored that call, or if they just circular-filed it.

So I am not certain how good the polls are, especially this far out and this early.

I believe there are 7 more debates scheduled, so there is time for things to shake out a bit:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republican_Presidential_Debates,_2008

Cesr | June 9, 2007, 3:36pm | #

I think it all depends on which party primary more independents in New Hampshire vote in.

If they choose to vote in the Republican primary, they could at least give Paul a much bigger vote than anyone would expect.

The Unregistered Voter | June 9, 2007, 3:43pm | #

I'll vote for anyone who promises to give Eric Dondero a kick in the balls.

tomwright | June 9, 2007, 3:47pm | #

Cesr, There are people making a living doing that. Maybe you can point them in E.D.'s direction. They may find an eager customer. :-)

WillyPete | June 9, 2007, 3:55pm | #

This is promising news, but a very recent article from Bowling Green which quoted Dr. Paul's son stated that he was closer to two million than 5. Hey, every million for Dr. Paul is comparable to many millions for the other candidates. He is very thrifty, his campaign is very thrifty and his supporters are extremely dedicated. The Internet has really changed things and so far Ron Paul is doing the most to take advantage of that.

Seer | June 9, 2007, 3:55pm | #

http://www.hamiltonspectator.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=hamilton/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1181277534326&call_pageid=1020420665036&col=1112101662670

What's that? Oh nothing, nothing except an article that points out that the methodology of "scientific" polls have a 3 to 5 point bias against Ron Paul.

Eric, you're an imbicile if you believe Rudy is a libertarian just because USN&WR was dumb enough to say so. I think when figuring out who a libertarian is I'll look at who writes for libertarian websites like antiwar.com, or maybe I'll look at who libertarians like Lew Rockwell are supporting, or maybe I'll look at people who are life members of the Libertarian Party and former presidential candidates.

Rudy isn't libertarian. He's not even conservative. He's fascist. He's "Freedom is Authority." Anyone ever see those games where you match the quote to the world leaders and FDR ends up having the most authoritarian quote? That's Rudy "Il Duce" Giuliani if he wins.

matt | June 9, 2007, 3:59pm | #

It is interesting how far campaign dollars will stretch when a candidate isn't paying people to support him a la Mitt Romney.

Grotius | June 9, 2007, 4:09pm | #

Not to be the turd in the punch bowl, but when Paul does well in a primary or a caucus or rises above 10% in the polls will be a time to get excited.

Cesar | June 9, 2007, 4:12pm | #

Don't worry, Ron Paul's supporters are so omnipotent and omnipresent they can game anything (including the primaries!)

You cannot defeat our magical powers.

tomwright | June 9, 2007, 4:14pm | #

WOOOooooOOOOooooo You WILL vote for Ron Paul
WOOOooooOOOOooooo You WILL vote for Ron Paul
WOOOooooOOOOooooo You WILL vote for Ron Paul
WOOOooooOOOOooooo You WILL vote for Ron Paul
WOOOooooOOOOooooo You WILL vote for Ron Paul
WOOOooooOOOOooooo You WILL vote for Ron Paul

Grotius | June 9, 2007, 4:30pm | #

How does Paul's campaign compare to Dean's at this point in 2003 (or Carter's in 1975)? As far as I can recall Paul is far behind where Dean was.

Thornton | June 9, 2007, 4:32pm | #

As long as Ron doesn't scream then I think he can beat out Dean

Grotius | June 9, 2007, 4:37pm | #

Thornton,

Well, that was later on in 2004. ;)

douglas westerman | June 9, 2007, 4:50pm | #

The psychic twins are predicting that Hillary will be the next Prez........sorry guys, I'd love to see Paul get into the White House, too! They say she beats Guliani, not surprising.......it's the non-political stuff......she "kept the faith" through public humiliation and infidelity wheras he's a sleaze on his third marriage...........

Randolph Carter | June 9, 2007, 5:24pm | #

Were people even talking about the presidential race in 2003? I feel like the whole election season has moved back significantly this cycle. Maybe because everyone's so pumped that it won't be George Bush.

Gryphon | June 9, 2007, 5:26pm | #

I sent him $25 just the other day.

How 'bout the rest of you Ron Paul supporters? Cough up some didge if you wanna make it happen.

Let's blow Judy McRomneyson outta the water!!!

Edward | June 9, 2007, 5:30pm | #

Homer Simpson would probably have a better chance of winning the nomination than Ron Paul.

miche | June 9, 2007, 6:00pm | #

"I do not know about any of you, but I was once called on a political poll. (years ago when I still had a hardwired line). I was given the choice of the R or D and I said I supported the Libertarian. I do not know what kind of group it was but they kept trying to get me to choose either the R or D candidate until they gave up after a minute or two of questions. I have no idea how they scored that call, or if they just circular-filed it."

Same thing happened to me in the TX governor race.

Sanderson Davis | June 9, 2007, 6:03pm | #

Edward,
I am sure that's true because Homer Simpson is a better choice than all the other candidates "known" by the public. Once they become aware of RP I look for HS to drop in the polls.

Bill Woolsey | June 9, 2007, 6:05pm | #

If the reports are correct that he is over $4 million, then that is wonderful news.

I believe that the poll results are our best information about how he is doing right now among likely Republican voters. And it isn't very good.

I think he has a lot of room for improvement. If he sticks with a simple, "get out of Iraq," "let's not invade Iran" message, then there are maybe 25% of likely Republican voters who agree and who clearly have no alternative.

If he can get a majority of those votes, he will be out of the second tier (and at the bottom of the top tier.)

Something like 25% of Republicans have abandoned the Republican Party in the last few years. Perhaps some of them might be willing to return. (Some may have left for reasons other than opposition to Bush's crazy war, of course.)

And, further, independents can be drawn into the process.

I think Paul's positions on all issues (including foriegn policy) are going to make winning the nomination (and the general election) very difficult.

Harley | June 9, 2007, 6:07pm | #

Eric,

So what if he was the Mayor on 9/11? I did not see anything that really stood out. I mean, the firefighters, paramedics, and police did their job and Rudy didn't fuck it up. Is that his major qualification? "I let them do their job!" Okay, more than what the Mayor of New Orleans can claim, but if NOT being a major fuck up is somehow something that means you should be President, it is just a sign that the politics of the US has slide to a very low point.

Oh, you are also a douchecoptor.

GILMORE | June 9, 2007, 6:16pm | #

Other people have pointed out that Paul has no chance at all of winning the primary - so isnt this like getting excited over your horse breaking from last to...third from last? It will have no impact on the eventual outcome.

It may have some longer term effect on helping consolidate a republican 'minority' constituency, but as far as national politics for the next 5 years... fart in wind...

Randolph Carter | June 9, 2007, 5:24pm | #
Were people even talking about the presidential race in 2003?


Uh. Yes, I assume so. The 2004 presidential race, probably

I think you mean 2006?

people have been hyped about the 2008 election since very early on because it's clearly a transition moment = ending ~8 years of management that few people can honestly defend without caveat. Naming Bush's "major achievements" is a tough job. On nearly every subject other than his tax cuts (and even to some degree on those), he's proved unable to deliver anything fruitful.

Republicans are in a weird identity crisis because many of the issues they've tied their cart to have drifted so far out of control...

they talked so brazenly tough on Immigration and Terror and Humble Leadership and Reforming Entitlements and God and Family and protecting Fetuses and children from sex predators and Leaving no Children Alone For Too Long etc etc that they find their base unwilling to hear anything other than I AM SO MUCH MORE AMERICAN THAN ANYONE THAT THIS NATION WILL IMPLODE WITHOUT MY LEADERSHIP.

Of course, on almost all these issues they've got little to show for their talk, after ~8 years of complete control of govt.

The uberconservative base is becoming the anchor pulling the party away from a winnable center. I think it's fascinating how there's this clear need to pander to the "I am a man of God" people, and claim to be a "right-to-lifer", but the clear frontrunners in the GOP are

A)Romney, B)Giuliani and C)McCain...

a)former pro-life democrat

b)pro gay-rights divorcee, occasional crossdresser, catholic mayor of the Heart of Godless Liberalism

c)openly reviled Bible Belt types for years even though he now kisses their ass.

I think there's a big question of uber conservatives staying home on election day if they dont get any chance at a candidate MORE hardcore than bush on at least 2 of their big issues. That hands the White House back to the dems. I suspect that they'd almost be happier with an Enemy democrat president in power, rather than a wishy washy republican. Just my thoughts as of today.

I think the republicans best hope is if Hilary wins the Dem nomination. *Then* they will bleed off some independents and dems who simply can't abide by her. I'm personally gunning for Obama. Call me a fan of 'inexperience', which i consider a plus in his case.

Hayekian Dreamer | June 9, 2007, 6:28pm | #

Since when did Mr. Dondero care what the mainstream media thinks? This is a truly remarkable day, suddenly a "libertarian" like Mr. Dondero is giving props to the media?

John Howard | June 9, 2007, 6:30pm | #

Could someone let me know exactly where, in the bible, The Zogby Poll is named, as the Definitive Word on all of mankind's opinions? Or is it not the bible, but the government-licensed MSM that is always telling us what we think - er - what we zogby?

I note three premises of the Ignore-Ron-Paul School of Political Commentary:

1) He has few supporters

2) His Mainstrean Supporters are beyond count

3) His few supporters are able to consistently out-spam the beyond count Mainstream Supporters in nearly all online polls.

Conclusion: We can ignore Ron Paul because his supporters are dishonest and clever - unlike the Mainstream Supporters, who are not so clever, but ever-so honest.

Mainstream Zogby tells us so. Who could doubt?

John Howard | June 9, 2007, 6:33pm | #

Correction: Premise 2 should have read:

2) THE Mainstrean Supporters are beyond count

Rob | June 9, 2007, 6:36pm | #

I'm a 40 year old WASP sort of guy, registered republican and I vote, though never straight ticket. I abstained from casting a vote for president the past 2 cycles. Ron Paul is voicing what I've been waiting to hear. I'm excited about it. I sent him $100.00 after the 2nd debate. The first time sending a politician money for me too, and I'm going to send more. I think the rest of the pack, republican and democrat, are in for a big surprise over the next few months.. Go Ron Go!

GoRonPaul | June 9, 2007, 6:50pm | #

I am concerned that the $5M figure is quite exaggerated... There have been some whispers from the Paul campaign indicating as much...

But if the number is indeed around $2M, that is still some real financial traction and enough to earn a bit of credibility with MSM hacks, and keep him in the race for a while longer...

I gave $500 the other day and persuaded a wealthy libertarian friend to give the max $2,300... that felt great. Reason readers who can, should do the same...

This is a fantastic, perhaps a once-in-a-lifetime, chance to advance some libertarian ideas in front of a mainstream audience.

I mean, he's been rocking the boat in those debates... and getting some attention from people who probably don't even know what a libertarian is...

Even if Paul does not win, his candidacy can have a significant influence on politics, particularly in the Republican party for a long time to come...

Go Ron Paul!!!

Doug | June 9, 2007, 6:54pm | #

RON PAUL RON PAUL RON PAUL RON PAUL. Im behind you DOC...... LETS TRY SOMEONE THAT TELLS US THE TRUTH!!!!!!!!

Lost_In_Translation | June 9, 2007, 6:59pm | #

I gave Ron $50 the other week. I feel that lack of money shouldn't be what knocks Ron out. He should make it atleast to the primaries with his message, regardless of how he does.

The important thing about our democracy is that every perspective has a voice and Ron is my perspective, so hand him the megaphone.

John reading | June 9, 2007, 7:04pm | #

The problem with Ron Paul's success is that it demonstrates what so many of us have feared - that the Mainsteam Media is actually quite stupid and dishonest. We are up against small, ignorant, petty minds that were comfortable and are now being disturbed.

Small, ignorant, and petty minds can be very ruthless when their comforts are disturbed. They will make war and destroy the earth before admitting to being wrong.

Ron Paul has done his part - he is right. Now it's our turn to be right (effective) in how we support him.

Rob | June 9, 2007, 7:19pm | #

Well I don't want that $5M to be quite exaggerated so I just sent Ron Paul $500.00 more. I'm getting pretty fervent about this fellow, the more I research the more I like. He's the man.

Angela T | June 9, 2007, 7:20pm | #

Wow. I can't believe there's actually a human alive that thinks Rudy G is a libertarian.

That aside - I am skeptical of the FMNN story. I think that 5 Mil is a rumor and we're going to look silly if we run around the web bragging about it then it does not pan out.

But I am sending him more money too.

Bill Woolsey | June 9, 2007, 7:27pm | #

Some online polls make multiple voting easy. Some Paul supporters (and supporters of other candidates) have done this. I suppose this is a bit like Spam. Just as in Spam, a person sends many emails, in this situation, a person makes many votes.

Paul supporters communicate the existence of online polls to other Paul suppoters, go visit the polls and vote for Paul.

This causes some consternation to those putting on the polls. Rather than getting those of their regular readers who are interesting in voting, they are getting people who just visit to vote in the poll.

It is interesting that Fox Network promoted its own poll during the debate, and even that was dominated by Paul supporters (well, he came in second.) There are enough Paul supporters to dominate even high volume websites.

But still, it is only a few thousand votes, right?

Most Americans don't care to vote in online polls.

Perhaps Paul supporters are a bunch of oddballs, and so they aren't reached in random sample pollng. But these pollsters do a pretty good job of predicting elections. You don't see very often that someone is at zero percent in the polls, but then they win the election because all of their supporters just consistently refuse to answer pollsters.

A lot of people who are not very engaged in the process, and will vote out of a sense of duty for someone they have heard of and who doesn't seem too bad, will often be too busy to answer a pollster. They would rather continue watching the ball game.

Those of us familiar with Libertarian Party polling results and final election results should be well aware that polls tend to overestimate support, not underestimate it.

jh | June 9, 2007, 7:28pm | #

I'm with Grotius on this one. When Ron Paul gets within striking distance of Fred McRomliani, then I'll get excited:

6/5-6/07 5/15-16/07

Rudy Giuliani 24 25

John McCain 15 18

Fred Thompson 14 9

Mitt Romney 12 10

Mike Huckabee 3 1

Tommy Thompson 3 2

Ron Paul 2 1

Al Newberry | June 9, 2007, 7:33pm | #

Eric Dondero shows his true colors.
Wow. Someone described Rudy as a libertarian, that means it must be true.

Eric, when you decide to actually BE a libertarian rather than just CALL yourself one, let us know.

Lost_In_Translation | June 9, 2007, 7:41pm | #

Sick of knowing that I would never be randomly selected for a national poll because I only have a cell phone, I signed up online for Zogby's polling list so sometime in the future they might at some point ask my opinion. Ha!!

crimethink | June 9, 2007, 7:41pm | #

Small, ignorant, and petty minds can be very ruthless when their comforts are disturbed. They will make war and destroy the earth before admitting to being wrong.

'The truth will always seem insane to those comfortable with lies.' --George William Rutler

As I've said before, the only conclusion I can come to from the MSM's dismissive treatment of Paul in the debates, is that they don't have nerve endings for his message. When he talks about keeping govt within the bounds of the Constitution, and letting states make decisions on contentious issues like abortion and gay marriage, he may as well be speaking Esperanto. He doesn't fit into the left-center-right continuum, so they toss him into the eccentric 3rd-tier candidate bin.

I don't think there's any sort of conspiracy afoot...it's in the media's best interest to play up division inside the parties (note how they've exaggerated the minor differences between Rudy, John, and Mitt, and act as if they expected a major brawl in the NH debate between these three very similar candidates). I simply think they interpret Ron Paul's positions as little more than crazy-talk.

Seer | June 9, 2007, 7:43pm | #

Bill, not all Paul supporters organize. I spontaneously vote once for him whenever I find an online poll. Of course, unlike most of his supporters I also give others their due (in CNN's recent online Poll I gave Tommy Thompson props for his improvement).

It's also very early. Yeah, if he's at 3% in December he'll probably lose, but being at 6-8% when land lines and other variables come into play is pretty good at this point. It's also good to have dedicated, hardcore support so early in the race. No one else has this kind of grass roots support (maybe Fred, but we'll see), they just have name recognition and money.

Seer | June 9, 2007, 7:46pm | #

I just saw the above post. He's got a point: the media doesn't want Ron Paul because he goes against the storyline for '08: that Dems are antiwar and the GOP is prowar. It's not a conspiracy, its just that he messes the story line. I mean, even right after MSNBC and CNN's debates I heard analysts say that the whole field was pro-Iraq (no one made that mistake after the fire works in the FOX debate). Clinton on Sunday night claimed they were all pro-war.

Edward | June 9, 2007, 7:50pm | #

Those who thinks Ron Paul is going to have a major impact on politics are marginally dumber than the dumbos who actually think he can win.

Gillmore should be getting paid to do political commentary. A Hillary win is the Reublicans' only chance. A woman for president violates the psychology of male status, and we're psychologically closer to the evolutionary environment than most other nations.

GoRonPaul | June 9, 2007, 8:00pm | #

Yes, Edward. We're idiots for thinking that Ron Paul's mainstream campaigning might have some effect on politics... Since when has a libertarian politician been given air-time on every major news outlet, however reluctantly?

But your evolutionary psychology idea is riveting... The only flaw is that it pre-supposes that we care whether or not the Republicrats win again...

Lost_In_Translation | June 9, 2007, 8:00pm | #

Edward,

What are you talking about?

dj_of_raleigh | June 9, 2007, 8:08pm | #

Paul, at 2% in the current Fox poll,
is becoming a haven for default voting,
where one can't stand the leaders.
I'm figuring libertians are about 1/2%.

Mike Laursen | June 9, 2007, 8:24pm | #

Question for someone who knows way more about international law/typical citizenship laws throughout the world: if we don't confer automatic citizenship on children who are born here, how likely are some of those children to end up having no citizenship whatsoever?

James Anderson Merritt | June 9, 2007, 8:31pm | #

If you are registered Libertarian, I wouldn't rush to switch to GOP just so you could vote for Ron Paul. There aren't enough registered Libertarians to make a difference for him except in the most Florida-2000-ish of circumstances. On the other hand, desertion in the LP ranks could harm the party's ballot access status, forcing it to spend more money to regain ballot status or simply give up on certain states altogether. In the event that Dr. Paul doesn't win the GOP nomination, it would be nice for there still to be at least one true libertarian on most or all state ballots in November of 2008. As long as the LP has access, it can nominate its own candidate, or even draft Dr. Paul. But if it has little or no ballot access, neither of those options will be open.

To me, it makes more sense for the great mass of independents to register GOP temporarily for purposes of promoting Dr. Paul's candidacy in the Republican Party. There are a lot more independents than all third-parties combined. If the Libertarian-leaning faction rushed the GOP on behalf of Dr. Paul, he might actually get somewhere. And assuming that Libertarians remained faithful to their own party, we could conceivably have TWO truly libertarian candidates for President next year. Wouldn't that be outstanding?

skeptic | June 9, 2007, 8:34pm | #

I certainly hope all the people throwing money at this political campaaign will later support libertarian causes that will actually make a difference especially those educating young people.

I'm a big skeptic on Paul. He's got too many conservative positions for me to get really thrilled and enough kooky positions (and friends) to worry me.

And I suspect the money raised is being exaggerated. It is floated by an anonymous person at the Paul campaign. But the rumor varies. I've seen $5 million, up to $4 million and then $2 million, etc. This was posted hours ago and at the time Radley asked the Paul campaign to confirm and so far nothing. Surely they would know. So why the delay? Why the vast differences in the sums?

GILMORE | June 9, 2007, 8:38pm | #

Edward | June 9, 2007, 7:50pm | #
Those who thinks Ron Paul is going to have a major impact on politics are marginally dumber than the dumbos who actually think he can win.

Gillmore should be getting paid to do political commentary....


thanks for the kudos

Only one "l" BTW

I dont think RP supporters are deluded, or that Paul's candidacy isnt meaningful or a good thing for the political landscape - at least to give the mainstream a real taste of how much support even *minor* libertarian cred can garnish... but I agree, he's got an snowballs chance in hell at actually ever receiving the nomination, and even less beating hilary in that kind of matchup. too many GOP would only remember Paul being the Blame America candidate, even though thats a false characterization. He got "swifted" in like 30 seconds in the first debate, which was unfortunate... even though he did well and is getting more support now

WillyPete | June 9, 2007, 9:03pm | #

RP will stand firm on his beliefs and America will come to him. That's how I found him. That's how most folks I know found him. Now that he is actually getting some face time on TV even more folks are being drawn in by his message.

NH | June 9, 2007, 9:10pm | #

Funny, Ron made more money than Rudy in NH right from the first fundraiser, and had more than 3 times as many rally-goers as Rudy did at this last debate. He won the WMUR bloggers poll, topping the list at 6 with Romney, garnering NOT ONE VOTE.

Rudy is a liberal and no different from Hillary.

NH | June 9, 2007, 9:11pm | #

PS - I just handed him and envelope with $10K in it at the debate...that was just from NH. Rudy and McCain have not done that! Nor have they gotten 182 people at a house party either.

GILMORE | June 9, 2007, 9:50pm | #

WillyPete | June 9, 2007, 9:03pm | #
RP will stand firm on his beliefs and America will come to him.


"here boy! here boy! Ronny has a cookie!"

whirrrrrrr, whirrrr, arp

"You stupid fucking dog! Come to me!"

----------------------------------

RonPaul Cheerleaders? Listen: you will win more supporters by engaging in conversation that by sniping boards with Sloganeer Crews

Seriously.

RPFAN | June 9, 2007, 9:53pm | #

Ron Paul came to my party last week and did fucking kegstands, then grabbed the mic and did a perfect rap of "Follow the Leader" by Erik B and Rakim WHILE beatboxing!!! the mfr' has like a double larynx and like 2 stomachs or something. I gave him the deed to my house and my youngest sister to sell on the black market. See ROmney pull that shit off!!

ILAH DUNLAP LITTLE | June 9, 2007, 10:00pm | #

I hope Ron Paul does well. I sent him a few bucks myself. First time I've sent money to a campaign in a long long time.

But, we have tunnel vision. Listen to the crap on conservative talk radio and the junk on Fox News for a change.

Even Neal Boortz has gone off the deep end with his pro-war and anti immigrant shallowness. I finally had to just turn him off.

Then you'll understand why Ron Paul has no chance to win the nomination.

IDL

Chris Welton | June 9, 2007, 10:08pm | #

Note to Progressives...

One thing that is critical to remeber about Ron Paul is that while his beliefs on progressive issues are not considered by many people to be "good", he is still firmly in favor of giving that power back to the states. I live in Seattle, Washington... I would like to see universal healthcare, evironmental reform, and a safety net to help people in hard times. I have come to the realization, however, that these are NEVER going to come so long as we live in a police state with federal laws preventing change at the state level and a bureaucracy intent of the status quo. The system is rigged... Period.

Every year we send hundreds of billions of dollars to the federal government and then bitch when it doesn't come back to us. It's time to quit sending the money out in the first place, and use it instead to fix the problems in the states in which we now stand.

The simple fact is, the positions of his which could be considered "ridiculous" are positions which he does not attempt to dictate to the people.

With Ron Paul you will be able to affect real change where you live. Without him, you won't be able to affect it at any level.

America Needs Ron Paul!

WillyPete | June 9, 2007, 10:11pm | #

@Gilmore

Yeah, and personal attacks really make you look like a charmer. Who is your candidate, Obama? Yeah, duly noted. Lots of Obama fans have been on the attack. I already added conversation to the piece above by stating that Ron Paul's son recently mentioned donations being nearer $2 million than 5. My second comment about RP remaining consistent and supporters coming to him is truthful. He hasn't been advertised to his fans like the other candidates.

Randolph Carter | June 9, 2007, 10:16pm | #

WillyPete,
Gilmore is an intelligent regular commenter here, and i don't think he supports Obama. No big deal if EVERY SINGLE PERSON doesn't want to get a hard-on over Ron Paul - and it is somewhat annoying when his supporters (myself included) have an I-love-Ron-Paul posting orgy.

mw | June 9, 2007, 10:27pm | #

Can't we libertarians all get along?

The 3% RP poll and the RP contribution surge can both be correct. My understanding is that any money contributed to RP's presidential campaign can be used by RP in his congressional re-election campaign if he drops out/loses the Republican presidential nomination.

Consider this fact: The Ron Paul contribution surge started on the very day that Eric Dondero declared himself a candidate for Paul's congressional seat.

Coincidence? I don't think so.

Clearly the RP contribution surge is directly attributable to Operation B.U.T.T.H.E.A.D.

Bloggers
United
To
Thoroughly
Head off the
Election of
Asshats like
Dondero.

For additional fun, how about a game of "spot the sock puppet" in this comment thread.

TallDave | June 9, 2007, 10:30pm | #

With that kind of cash, he might break 1%!

TallDave | June 9, 2007, 10:35pm | #

Seriously though, while I agree with what a lot of Ron says he has zero chance of winning either the nomination or the general election.

Probably the best he can hope for is to build a large enough constituency that his endorsement of a major candidate is meaningful enough to extract some significant concession(s) from the frontrunner.

Isaac Bartram | June 9, 2007, 10:35pm | #

I find it worth noting that every LP activist in Fla that I know has been bitching about Rittberg/Dondero and his asshole attempts to hijack libertarianism since about 1987.


C'm'on, Benito Giuliani is a 'Libertarian"? Give me a fucking break!

TallDave | June 9, 2007, 10:38pm | #

Giuliani is a 'Libertarian"?

Probably the best you'll get among major candidates. Dems all want national health care and other big-gov stuff, and he's the only social liberal on the GOP side.

Lost_In_Translation | June 9, 2007, 10:47pm | #

TallDave,

Guliani is not a libertarian. That doesn't mean that he will tax us to death or wonder who's sleeping in our beds, but he'd suffer no qualms about taking an innocent man out and cutting him into little tiny pieces until he told guliani what Guliani wants to hear. Nor would he be afraid to bomb other countries indiscriminately. He's a bully first and foremost regardless of his qualities and only people that want to see a Putin "strongman" in the whitehouse should vote for him.

WillyPete | June 9, 2007, 10:51pm | #

@Randolph Carter

Here is a quote from Gilmore that gave me the impression that Gilmore is gunning for Obama... "I'm personally gunning for Obama."

Also, I did not simply make a 'Go Ron Paul 2008!' post, merely noted that RP remains firm on his message, doesn't get advertised and that a lot of his supporters find him. If that is too much for Gilmore or anyone else to take, it is not my problem. I'm not the one who made it personal.

Detractors toss around their catch phrase slogans like 'RP doesn't have a snowballs chance in hell to win' and that's fine. What they don't realize is that for many people hell might not be a hot place but rather a very cold one and a snowball would have a damn good chance there.

Randolph Carter | June 9, 2007, 11:41pm | #

haha, ok, I didn't read his full post. I was just defending him because most of what he's written in the past has been well thought out, etc.

GoRonPaul | June 9, 2007, 11:44pm | #

As a long-time Reason reader I find it difficult to conceive of not getting a raging hard-on for a candidate like Paul... Perhaps he doesn't have all the socially-liberal creds we'd like, but, come on... Are you going to wait till Jesus returns and tells everyone to chill-out and persue their individual happiness while respecting the property rights of others, then support his campaign!?? Hhaaaa!

But do forgive the cheerleading...

JM | June 9, 2007, 11:44pm | #

These posts are awesome Dondero bait.

jh | June 9, 2007, 11:45pm | #

Chris Welton says: "Note to Progressives... One thing that is critical to remeber about Ron Paul is that while his beliefs on progressive issues are not considered by many people to be "good", he is still firmly in favor of giving that power back to the states. I live in Seattle, Washington... I would like to see universal healthcare, evironmental reform, and a safety net to help people in hard times ... Every year we send hundreds of billions of dollars to the federal government and then bitch when it doesn't come back to us. It's time to quit sending the money out in the first place, and use it instead to fix the problems in the states in which we now stand.

The simple fact is, the positions of his which could be considered "ridiculous" are positions which he does not attempt to dictate to the people."

Chris, I appreciate your support, but are you aware this is a libertarian website, not a "progressive" one? "Universal healthcare" means the government forcing businesses and individuals to purchase health care, and/or extracting taxes to transfer money from some citizens to pay for health care for others. "Environmental reform" generally seems to mean passing a bunch of regulations about how businesses can be run, and how people can use their private property. And "a safety net to help people in hard times" is almost invariably NOT voluntary donations, but compulsory confiscation of taxes to transfer wealth from one group of people to another.

These are the kind of "ridiculous" notions Ron Paul holds. along with most of the people who post here. Perhaps you should consider whether these compulsory programs you'd like to "attempt to dictate to the people" (your words) are fair, humane, or in any way likely to enhance freedom? (Hint: No. Gawd no. Did I mention "no"? If not, my bad. P.S. No.)

You seem like a nice person who doesn't realize that the socialist beliefs you hold lead to utter misery if pursued to their logical end. Please reconsider.

J. Goard | June 10, 2007, 12:06am | #

God damn it, people. Try to think like gamblers, not like suckers.

Hillary Clinton has no chance of winning, because the (private voting booth) bias against her gender doesn't have to be very large at all to kill her in all of the critical swing states. She probably wouldn't completely embarrass herself in the popular vote, but she wouldn't win the election.

Goes triple for Obama, except for the not embarrassing part.

Same for Romney, if he's matched against affable southerner Edwards (the formula for Democrat victory).

So, unless the thread has been hijacked by cosmologists, let's please not talk about infinitesimal odds. There is a much greater chance of a nuclear attack causing GWB to be appointed dictator for life, than of Ron Paul winning the presidential election.

Neu Mejican | June 10, 2007, 12:11am | #

"You seem like a nice person who doesn't realize that the socialist beliefs you hold lead to utter misery if pursued to their logical end. Please reconsider."

Thank god no idea/belief ever held is pursued to their logical end in reality...including those that you hold jh.
In the real world principles are used to guide policy ... caveats and adjustments for the insufficiencies of the abstracted/schematic model included.

Eric Dondero | June 10, 2007, 12:13am | #

lol libertarians for fascism

FatDrunkAndStupid | June 10, 2007, 12:14am | #

Looking at National Polls isn't very productive. Rudy is winning the national polls at this point*, and nobody thinks he has a chance in hell at the nomination. Indeed, when you look at Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina, he isn't in first place in any of the polls in those states. National polls are just registering name recognition at this point, and what some of you have to remember is that even though we all know who Ron Paul was, 99% of America didn't. Contrast that to the 99% that did know who Rudy and John McCain were. Ron started from nowhere. To be where he is at right now, and to have raised even 2 million dollars, would be an astounding accomplishment. Doom and gloom all you want- none of us expected this. He's still a long shot, but his campaign is absolutely on fire.

*And some websites are posting national results complied from the polls in individual states. But when you looked behind the numbers, Ron wasn't even included in the choices of half the states they used to make the meta-poll. So not only are national polls useless, some forms of them highly discriminate against Paul too.

Roy Haddad | June 10, 2007, 12:15am | #

Chris didn't seem to take a position either way. In any case, he has a point. Whether you believe in modern economic liberalism or not, you can support state's rights. Whichever it is, if you are right, the track record of the various states will start to show it - states with more, or less, regulation will begin to do better in statistically noticeable ways, and your views will either be vindicated or (justifiably) demolished or modified. In any case, the world is a better place as more people begin to implement the winning policies (particularly since only a few states will have gone to pot, or have begun going to pot, rather than the whole country).

Eric Dondero | June 10, 2007, 12:17am | #

Hey guys, all you need to know is Bush was right!

Chris Welton | June 10, 2007, 12:18am | #

jh - Yes, I realize this is a libertarian websiite: and I respect your views on all of the points you just made, and I thank you for the rebuttal, as I think it is very important to talk about such things.

What I am saying is that I believe (morally) healthcare should be available to all, but any attempt to do it at the federal level will end up with the exact problems you refer to. It has to be done at a local level (by people who really give a damn and aren't taking bribes), where those who make mistakes can be held accountable, and where real criticisms can be raised. Please note that this is also the level at which oponents of this idea will have the greatest voice.

As for the environment, it seems to me that there are quite a few practices of major corporations that really do impede on the rights of others by polluting the air they breath and the water they drink (without compensation). Once again, however, any attempt to force these issues at a federal level as opposed to local action is bound to end up as inefficiency, incompetence, and the destruction of rights.

'"Environmental reform" generally seems to mean passing a bunch of regulations about how businesses can be run'

But it doesn't have to mean that. There is a difference between telling a company they must use scrubbers (how to run it), and individual states issuing guidelines for sane emissions (where the market would be allowed to find the best way to produce things without destroying the environment, whether it is by using horribly inefficient overpriced scrubbers, or by finding a newer better way)

And even with the last point what I am talking about is finding ways to make sure people aren't sleeping in the streets in my own neighborhood, not an overarching welfare state. It will take a mixture of private charity and local government action, but even as I said before, those who oppose it will be able to directly join in the debate.

All that aside, I am talking about what i want to do here in Washington State, and the Seattle area specifically. I'm not advocating forcing these issues onto anyone else. Do you see this as rampant socialism or community action?

Derrick | June 10, 2007, 12:47am | #

Enough already from the "Ron Paul doesn't have a chance" crowd. If that's even true, it's due largely to self-fulfilling statements from defeatists - people who are destined to lose because they don't even bother trying.

Winners say "this is possible" and then find ways to make something happen. Not to sound like Tony Robbins, but that's pretty much how things work.

Andrew | June 10, 2007, 1:01am | #

In the Utah GOP Straw Poll only Romney finished ahead of Paul which is a given considering he's a Mormon in Utah.

It's funny how whenever a liberty oriented message gets popular, the label attached to it gets hijacked by big government types. The term liberal got hijacked way back when and now we say classical liberal. It looks like the same is being done with libertarian. If Dondero and Rudy are libertarians then so is Hillary Clinton.

Marc Scott Emery | June 10, 2007, 1:02am | #

This talk that Ron Paul doesn't have a chance of winning is ridiculous. Who cares? Only one person wins the presidency, so should everyone who supports a candidate not polling 25% right now abandon their ideal choice and confirm the leading contender? Remember, every vote for any candidate that doesn't win is, in reality, a wasted vote. So if you don't want to waste your vote, that would mean voting for the inevitable winner. And what exactly, would the point of that be?

Hillary-Obama-Rudy-McCain-Romney-Edwards, the differences between these 6 candidates is trivial. 90% of all voters, Democratic & Republican, currently support one of these 6 candidates. Should we join in, forget our principles and our intense devotion and admiration for Dr. Paul's advocacy, and support a "winner". Will the nation be greater for that?

No! The nation will be greater if we all re-double our efforts, give more money, make more posters, wear Ron Paul T-shirts, put Ron Paul flags & bumber stickers on our cars, sign up voters, join a Ron Paul regional or state campaign office, tell everyone you know, or even put a sign on your balcony that says GOOGLE RON PAUL.

Derrick | June 10, 2007, 1:06am | #

And even with the last point what I am talking about is finding ways to make sure people aren't sleeping in the streets in my own neighborhood, not an overarching welfare state. It will take a mixture of private charity and local government action, but even as I said before, those who oppose it will be able to directly join in the debate.

Reduce the rate at which we are all taxed, and this problem will largely solve itself. More income means each of us can buy more goods and services, which means companies can employ more people, which leaves fewer people jobless, which leaves fewer people homeless.

There will still be a very small handful of people who are left homeless due to severe mental illness, but we'll be in a better position to help them because we'll all have more money in our pockets.

Lost_In_Translation | June 10, 2007, 1:11am | #

Chris,

I agree with your thoughts on regulation. Thoughtful, scientifically based "environmental reform" is an overall good. One caveat, however, is that I've rarely seen government produce something thoughtful and scientifically based. After all, how many scientists do you see in government. Yeah...

So instead of immediately thinking "what can the government do....", think "how can the free market fix this....". Its a fundamental change that defines the difference between nannyism and libertarianism. Essentially, its my belief the government may "make you do the right thing" briefly, as it goes against your interests usually, but the market can "get you to want to do the right thing" as long as you continue to benefit

There are times when its hard to think of a market-oriented solution, but if your default is asking those questions first, you're on the right track.

Pig Mannix | June 10, 2007, 1:14am | #

@TallDave

Seriously though, while I agree with what a lot of Ron says he has zero chance of winning either the nomination or the general election.

That's probably true. And that was true of Howard Dean in the Democratic party, too. But note that while Dean didn't get to be king, he still wound up in an excellent position to be a king-maker within his party. I wouldn't mind seeing Ron Paul end up with a similar influence in the Republican party.

@Isaac Bartram

I find it worth noting that every LP activist in Fla that I know has been bitching about Rittberg/Dondero and his asshole attempts to hijack libertarianism since about 1987.

Separated at birth?

I don't know about you, but I see a distinct resemblance!

@Roy Haddad

Chris didn't seem to take a position either way. In any case, he has a point. Whether you believe in modern economic liberalism or not, you can support state's rights.

True enough, and I think it needs to be recognized that different populations will prefer different political institutions. If Washington state wants state-wide health care, social safety nets and stringent environmental protections, fine with me, as long as I have the option of living in a state that has different ideas about the role of government.

Federalism is libertarianism's (and everyone else's) friend!

Eric the .5b | June 10, 2007, 1:44am | #

Boy, let's hope that definition of "Surge" is applied to other libertarian hopefuls. We'd be out of existence as a movement in months.
Wow, Eric Dondero rooting for the end of libertarianism.

I'm just surprised that he'd actually admit he was just a Red shill here.

John Rhoads | June 10, 2007, 2:34am | #

I actually think Ron Paul's chances of winning a general election are far greater than his chances of winning the nomination (which I agree are not good). If Hillary gets the Democratic nomination this is doubly true. In a Ron Paul/Hillary Clinton matchup, RP is clearly the best anti-war candidate, and it is likely that this election is essentially going to be a referendum on the war. Oddly enough, I do believe that Ron Paul is the Republican party's best chance to win the presidency, because a pro-war candidate really has no chance in '08. Unfortunately, he probably wont win the nomination, but I'll be happy if he gets 10-20% of the vote. Say what you want about Kucinich, but his importance in politics clearly increased as a result of his reasonable showing in the Democratic primary.

The one possible reason for optimism I can see with Ron Paul in the primary is that primaries, like off-year elections, tend to have poor turnouts. This is only an advantage to someone like Paul who has fewer general supporters, but ones that are more likely to go out of their way to vote in a primary.

jh | June 10, 2007, 3:29am | #

I said: "You seem like a nice person who doesn't realize that the socialist beliefs you hold lead to utter misery if pursued to their logical end. Please reconsider."

Neu Mejican said: "Thank god no idea/belief ever held is pursued to their logical end in reality...including those that you hold jh.
In the real world principles are used to guide policy ... caveats and adjustments for the insufficiencies of the abstracted/schematic model included."

Neu Mejican (and Chris Welton, too): Have you read Hayek's "The Road to Serfdom"? Have you read how Hitler's national socialism was pursued to its logical bitter end, with concentration camps, little kids given Panzerschrecks and sent out against tanks, and the near-complete ruin of Germany? Have you read about the starvation and complete subjection of North Koreans under that regime's version of communism? The tens of millions who perished in Mao's Great Leap Forward? The millions killed in China's Cultural Revolution? The murder of any non-proletarian in Cambodia's killing fields under the Khmer Rouge? Or Stalin's purges? Or ...

Fer chrissakes, how many times must the awful, bitter logic of every possible permutation of socialism be carried out to its logical, horrifying end before we finally say, "Never again?"

cfountain72 | June 10, 2007, 3:50am | #

Amen, Brother Emery!
Why even hard-core Libertarians would not support Ron Paul is beyond me. The LP needs to just continue its slow roll up the food chain through county commissions and state houses. Sure, Rep. Paul is not pure LP material. But for now, he has schrewdly used the Republican Party to get the liberty message out to more Americans in 3 debates than have heard it in years. Even without the nomination, a good showing by Paul should encourage more in the LP to make serious runs in the US House. Folks at Cato could come down from the ivory tower and encourage change from WITHIN the gov't.

Personally, even though I have voted LP in the past two cycles, I didn't even know who the man was before last month. Now, I just made my first contribution to a candidate (EVER) this week. While we may follow this stuff pretty close, we can safely assume that the 90% of the 98% who didn't select Paul in polling don't even know who is, or think that he's Ru Paul's dad.

Fox polling also shows an interesting trend. Benito Guiliani falls from 35 to 22 from April to June. Who picks up the slack? Well, Rep. Paul goes from 0 to 2 and Unsure goes up from 11 to 19?! Obviously, the more they learn about Benito, the less they like him. There is no reason we can't pick up 5% to 8% of the Unsure's. If we can get in the 8% to 10% range by Fall, RP's name will have to be mentioned along with the top tier, based on momentum alone. Then we can avoid the premature 'thinning of the herd' so loved by the MSM. Keep the faith! Go ahead and try the Kool-Aid...tastes pretty good to me!

www.ronpaul2008.com

jh | June 10, 2007, 3:53am | #

Chris Welton -- thank you for your courteous, thoughtful reply. My comments on your remarks:

You said: "What I am saying is that I believe (morally) healthcare should be available to all, but any attempt to do it at the federal level will end up with the exact problems you refer to. It has to be done at a local level (by people who really give a damn and aren't taking bribes), where those who make mistakes can be held accountable, and where real criticisms can be raised. Please note that this is also the level at which oponents of this idea will have the greatest voice."

I have worked at Hawaii's state legislature for seven years now as a legislative aide. I started off as center-rightist who thought government was basically good, but a bit too large. The experience has turned me into a hardcore libertarian. The problem is this: politicians are scum. They can't be trusted. They can and will do anything to get votes, and they have an insatiable appetite for other people's money. So, yes, it seems at first glance that morally, how can any with a heart be opposed to healthcare for everyone? The problem is, what you're proposing is to accomplish this by an incredi bly immoral act -- forcibly confiscating money from citizens, with fines and jail time for anyone who resists. Is this OK to serve the purportedly moral end you seek? Ask yourself this -- are you willing to personally pick up a gun and go to your neighbors' houses and demand they give you money so you can give it to others so they can buy health care? If not, does that become somehow moral if you instead hire strangers to do the same thing?

Chris says: "As for the environment, it seems to me that there are quite a few practices of major corporations that really do impede on the rights of others by polluting the air they breath and the water they drink (without compensation). Once again, however, any attempt to force these issues at a federal level as opposed to local action is bound to end up as inefficiency, incompetence, and the destruction of rights."

As a liberta