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The Wayback Machine and Ron Paul
David R. Henderson
Lew Rockwell.com
Thursday January 24, 2008
Sometimes, to evaluate what you have lost or what you have
achieved, you need to mentally put yourself in a time machine. That is,
go back mentally to some time in the past and ask yourself how you think
the world will be in the future – that is, now. Then compare what you
"expected" with what is. If you take the experiment seriously
and don’t "cheat" by kidding yourself about your incredible
foresight, the results can be informative. I did this with two things
recently, the state of civil liberties in the United States and the discussion
of foreign policy. Both were informative. I invite you to enter your own
time machine and consider both.
First, take civil liberties. Wait! Let me rephrase that
in case any politicians are reading this. I don’t really mean "take"
civil liberties; I mean "consider civil liberties." Go in the
wayback machine to
September 10, 2001 and ask yourself the following:
-
Do you think that in 2008, the federal government will
have nationalized airport security? Will federal government agents
insist that even little toddlers take off their shoes before getting
on an airplane? Will the federal government tell you that you can’t
take a bottle of wine or a 12-ounce container of shampoo on board?
-
Do you think that officials high up in the federal
government will justify a form of torture called waterboarding? Will
high federal government officials argue in favor of suspending habeas
corpus, one of our most ancient liberties and the cornerstone
of the others? Will Congress actually pass a law suspending habeas
corpus for cases that do not involve "Cases of Rebellion or Invasion,"
the only situations in which they are allowed to do so under Article
I, Section 9 of the U.S. Constitution?
How did you answer? My guess is that most of you put a fairly
low probability on these things happening. Yet all of them happened.
(Article continues below)
Consider them one by one:
-
In the fall of 2001, the federal government nationalized
airport security, turning it over to a new government agency, the
Transportation Security Administration.
As anyone who has traveled lately knows, the TSA does force parents
to take off even their toddlers’ shoes and does prohibit you from
taking on board any container that holds more than three ounces of
liquid.
-
The federal government now regards waterboarding,
in which water is poured down a prisoner’s throat so that he thinks
he’s going to drown, as a perfectly acceptable method for extracting
information from prisoners. In 2001, President Bush signed
an executive order giving himself the power to suspend habeas
corpus for non-U.S. citizens. In 2006, Congress passed the Military
Commissions Act of 2006, in which it gave the President the power
to suspend habeas corpus for aliens. The U.S. Senate explicitly voted
down, by 5148, a provision to preserve habeas corpus. There
is some controversy
over whether it gives the government the power to suspend habeas corpus
for U.S. citizens, as well.
That’s the bad news. Now to the (mainly) good news. Put
yourself in a the wayback machine and ask yourself these questions:
-
Do you think that there will be a candidate for president
who consistently speaks out against the destructive idiocy of government
intervention in other countries’ affairs and who keeps his dignity
when attacked by some fairly juvenile opponents? Do you think that
such a candidate will also oppose federal intervention in people’s
lives that goes beyond what a strict reading of the U.S. Constitution
allows? Do you think that such a candidate will also raise over $25
million in small contributions?
-
Do you think that this hypothetical candidate could
be a 70+-year-old man who can generate enormous excitement among U.S.
youth without pandering to them? Do you think that he’ll generate
interest among these youth by talking about getting rid of the Federal
Reserve Board? Do you think that this candidate can keep winning debates
with his competitors, not just in your eyes, but in the eyes
and ears of those who bother to vote online?
-
Do you think that this candidate will appear on the
very-well-prepped Tim Russert’s "Meet the Press" and actually
answer his questions without evasion? Will this cause Russert to jump
from issue to issue quickly, which is what his guests usually
try to do?
-
Do you think that this candidate will appear to be such
a threat to the big-government consensus that even Fox News, until
recently the only mainstream media voice in favor of smaller government
(foreign policy aside), will try to marginalize him?
-
Do you think that, as a bonus, this candidate will take
on Americans’ love affair with Abraham Lincoln, the man who suspended
habeas corpus, prevented his political opponents from voting against
him, and set the stage for the growth of a powerful central government?
And, if he does, do you think he’ll score points by suggesting that
there were other ways to end slavery besides getting into a war that
killed over 600,000 Americans?
-
Will this candidate do well despite an incompetent campaign
staff that forgets to tell voters that their candidate opposes an
interventionist foreign policy?
My guess is that you put well below a 20-percent probability
on any of these things happening. The one exception might be number four;
more on that anon. Yet all of these did happen.
- In the various debates and in interviews, Ron Paul has consistently
attacked the idea that the U.S. government should stick its nose into
other people’s business. His first major challenge came in a May 15
debate, aired by Fox news. Competitor
Rudy Giuliani asked Ron Paul to take back his claim that the 9/11
terrorists attacked us because of our government’s foreign policy
rather than because of our freedom. Ron Paul refused to back down
and, instead, elaborated on his claim. Interestingly, Paul scored
another victory that has gone unremarked: after Paul backed up his
claim by citing the CIA, and the other Republican candidates tried
to pile on, Fox questioner Wendell Goler stopped them, saying, "I
don’t think we’re going to solve this tonight, gentlemen." Think
about that statement. That’s an amazing concession from Fox News,
which, ever since 9/11, has pushed the idea that the terrorists hated
us for our freedom and has never been open to the idea that we could
get fewer such attacks by getting our government’s nose out of other
countries’ business. After hearing one articulate man who won’t back
down in the face of browbeating from the questioners and his fellow
candidates, Goler is willing to concede that this is a tougher issue
than Fox had said for the previous five-plus years.
-
And since that May 15 set-to, Paul has kept the same
message, even using a chance to try to educate
John McCain about the difference between advocacy of isolationism,
which McCain accused him of, and advocacy of a non-interventionist
foreign policy.
At the same time, Ron Paul has emphasized that the U.S.
government needs to practice a relatively non-interventionist policy
on its own citizens, restricting itself to the small list of enumerated
powers given to it by the U.S. Constitution (here
and here
and here,
to take three examples.)
Finally, with his strong showing in the fourth quarter
of 2007, raising almost
$20 million, and his continued showing this quarter, he has raised
over $25 million.
-
Ron Paul has generated enormous excitement among
the country’s youth. If you want an idea why, check this
article in The New Republic’s blog by Eve Fairbanks, who
was totally charmed by the manners, decency, passion, and knowledge
of the young Ron Paul volunteers she met in Iowa. On a micro level,
I see it at the local Ron Paul meetup in Monterey.
In Ron Paul’s speech
at the end of the New Hampshire primary, he noted with glee that
he had received loud cheers at the University of Southern California
and the University of Michigan when he advocated abolishing the Federal
Reserve Board.
And, of course, much
to Sean Hannity’s dismay, Ron Paul keeps
winning in the online polling (and here)
after the Republican debates. In fact, his winning has become so common
that most of the media either don’t report it or take the notices
down very quickly when they realize that he has won yet again.
-
On December 23, 2007, Tim Russert interviewed Ron
Paul on "Meet the Press." Russert’s typical strategy is
to dig out quotes from the interviewee and try to make him squirm
as he attempts to square these quotes with his current statements.
That strategy works with the typical interviewee, typically a politician
who shifts with the political winds. I’ve always wondered what would
happen if a guest said, in response to a question calculated to embarrass,
"Yes, I said that, and here’s why." On December 23, I found
out. On the first issue, getting
rid of the IRS, Russert’s strategy didn’t work. Paul agreed that
yes, you can’t get rid of the $1-trillion-plus individual income tax
without cutting spending. So Russert turned to foreign policy. He
asked Paul what he would have the U.S. government do if North Korea
invaded South Korea. Paul answered that he would not have the U.S.
government do anything. Then Russert asked what the U.S. government
should do if Iran invaded Israel. Paul answered that that’s like asking
what should happen if Iran invades Mars. Paul pointed out that with
300 nuclear weapons, Israel was fully capable of defending itself.
Russert’s rare excursion into winging it didn’t work and so he went
back to digging up quotes.
Russert quoted
a former Paul employee named Eric Dondero, who had said that Ron
Paul’s first reaction on September 11, 2001 was to complain that this
would lead to even bigger government. How would Ron Paul handle this
dynamite, I asked myself. I think this was his finest moment in the
whole interview. He admitted that he had said it and that he had been
right: witness the USA PATRIOT Act and the other violations of civil
liberties. Paul quoted Randolph Bourne’s famous line that "[w]ar
is the health of the state." But, said, Paul, he had been too
pessimistic. The traction he was getting by talking about getting
our freedoms back made him realize, he said, that there’s still a
strong pro-freedom movement in America.
Russert looked totally nonplussed. He couldn’t get Paul
to evade, and Paul actually defended his keeping
his head on 9/11, when most people about him were losing theirs.
Russert seemed to want us to think that this person was heartless,
not caring about 3,000 murder victims. But does anyone really think
Ron Paul didn’t care about them? The same day that Ron Paul made his
statement about the loss of freedom, President George W. Bush grinningly
said that the 9/11 attacks gave us an "opportunity." Yet
I don’t remember any reporter challenging him on that.
At one point (about 3:30 on the second
segment), Russert literally jumped from questioning whether Paul
would abolish the FBI, hardly giving him a chance to answer more than
yes or no, to whether he would abolish government schools. Russert
was clearly flustered. There were other issues where Russert scored
points, the main one being Paul’s putting pork-barrel spending into
bills for his district, but, by and large, Paul won.
-
On this one, dear reader, you may have predicted better
than I. I had had hopes for the Fox News Channel as an advocate of
smaller government, hopes
somewhat justified by evidence. But their treatment of Ron Paul
has been off the charts. Chris Wallace has been absolutely vicious
– at one point, after Paul had bested
him, accusing Paul of taking his "marching orders from Al Qaeda."
(Paul responded that "we should take our marching orders from
our Constitution.") Carl Cameron, whom I think is one of the
best reporters on TV (admittedly a low bar), was completely unclassy,
raising the issue of electability and asking Ron Paul, "Do you
have any, sir?" Again, Paul showed incredible class in answering
with a little eye twinkle at first and then forcefully. And in that
same debate, Brit Hume, the best, most-seasoned reporter on Fox, tried
to persuade Paul and the TV audience that they had not just heard
Mike Huckabee, Fred Thompson, and Rudy Giuliani strut their hawkishness
when asked about the recent Navy response to the Iranian speedboats.
That was a definite low point for Hume.
Finally, there is the fact that, in its graphic of the
Nevada primary results, Fox literally left out Ron Paul’s second-place
showing, but showed the results for Romney, McCain, and Huckabee.
This had to be a low point for Fox. Or, at least, one can hope that
this is the low point.
-
When David Shuster on MSNBC gave him a chance to take
back what he said, Paul refused. Shuster
took the bait and showed the moment with Tim Russert. That way,
people listening to Shuster’s claims first heard Paul say that it
would have been nice not to get over 600,000 killed. It also gave
Paul a chance to give the MSNBC audience a lesson about Lysander
Spooner, the famous libertarian abolitionist. One of the results
of this bonus is that many Americans are actually
getting educated about U.S. history, after decades of getting
the official Sovietized party line in the government schools.
-
Finally, the bad news amidst all the good news. In
much of the literature that the Ron Paul campaign sends out and in
many of the ads, you wouldn’t know that the person they advertise
is the person I’ve talked about above. For instance, in an expensive
multi-color mailing to San Francisco Republicans, a small group that
Paul could actually win delegates from, the brochure does not even
mention that Paul wants to pull U.S. troops out of Iraq. Paul’s immigration
ad for television advocates "No More Student VISA’s (sic)
from Terrorist Nations." Who gets to define a terrorist nation?
And, more important, even if such a nation is correctly identified,
how does a peaceful person coming from such a nation threaten the
United States? That ad is awfully collectivist.
Which makes Ron Paul’s accomplishment all the more impressive,
the best one so far being his second-place showing in Nevada.
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