ONTD Political

Ron Paul’s consistency doesn’t make him right

8:20 pm - 01/05/2012
BY LEONARD PITTS JR.
LPITTS@MIAMIHERALD.COM
"A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds." - Ralph Waldo Emerson

Ralph Waldo Emerson, meet Ronald Ernest Paul. He is the very soul of a foolish consistency. Meaning that he is willing, often to a fault, to follow his ideology to its logical and most extreme conclusions.

In this, the congressman differs from other GOP contenders for the White House and, for that matter, from most politicians, period. Your average pol might rail against the intrusion of government into the private lives of its citizens, then turn right around and advocate a law regulating what a gay man does in his bedroom — and see no contradiction. Paul is too intellectually honest for that.

Intellectual honesty is a good thing, if only because it can lead you to reconsider a faulty premise. But in Paul’s take on the Civil Rights Act of 1964 he doubles down on the bad premise instead.

Paul has long argued — and reiterated Sunday on CNN — that the Act, which liberated untold millions of African Americans from the tyranny of Jim Crow, “destroyed the principle of private property and private choices.” In other words, forcing a restaurant to take down a Whites Only sign infringed the rights of the restaurant’s owner. A similar argument was made by segregationists in 1964 — and by slave owners in the 1850s.

Maybe, it’s easy to make freedom an issue of “property rights” when you have never been the property.


That said, it is of little importance to wonder, as some are now doing, whether all of this makes Ron Paul a racist. Yes, we’ve recently learned of a newsletter sent out under his name in the 1990s that included racist language. Yes, Paul has won — and declined to disavow — the support of various white supremacist groups.

But yes, too, Paul has (rightly) decried the War on Drugs as a war on African-American men. So take him at his word, that he is just a man for whom government equals tyranny — a view shared by many on the right. Then ask yourself what sort of nation this would be if that view ever prevailed.

Can government be overlarge, overbearing, overwhelming, over restrictive, over intrusive? Of course. And where it is those things, it is the right — and duty — of the electorate to pare it back.

On the other hand, unless you enjoy salmonella in your food and lead in your paint, unless you think it’s OK that your doctor has no medical degree and your lawyer no license, unless you’re fine with breathing sooty air and drinking tainted water and unless you really think a black woman in Mississippi, locked out of public places by threat of violence and force of law, should have been required to wait on market forces to rescue her, you must regard Paul’s moral imbecility with a certain appalled awe.

Heaven help us if the intellectual rigidity he symbolizes is really the only alternative to the intellectual malleability of so many of his colleagues

At its best, government vindicates and defends a people’s noblest ideals. The Civil Rights Act was government at its best. Paul disputes this and styles himself a defender of freedom for so doing. Too bad he can’t spend a day being black in Mississippi in 1964. He might emerge with a better understanding of that word.

As it is, Paul’s extremism only proves this much: Emerson didn’t know the half of it.

Source. As always, don't read the comments, the Paul supporters are out in force. I had to post it for that one line, because daaaamn.

Edited to remove iffy term. Sorry about that.
mdemvizi 6th-Jan-2012 04:34 am (UTC)
my brother has latched onto the crazy ron paul train. ron paul has harkened on his number of donations from active military soldiers and my brother is one of them. grr.
chantalzola 6th-Jan-2012 04:42 am (UTC)
I really hate the term Paultard. Maybe I'm being overly sensitive, but I find it really offensive. I might be th sonly one though as I haven't seen anyone else mention it bothering me. So yeah, I'm probably being too sensitive.

Anyway, my boyfriend is probably going to vote for him. I don't get it. At all. Also I think it's pretty obvious he will not get the repub. nom.

I think Obama will win, though I have a feeling it will be depressingly close, with whoever the repub nom is.
sesmo 6th-Jan-2012 04:44 am (UTC)
Totally didn't think of that. Thanks for pointing it out. I removed the term.
superfan1 6th-Jan-2012 05:00 am (UTC)
Great post. :)

The comments are amusing in the link.

Edited at 2012-01-06 05:15 am (UTC)
elobelia 6th-Jan-2012 05:10 am (UTC)
I hate the fact that people act like the fact that he hasn't changed in decades is a GOOD thing. Only a moron doesn't change as a response to information and evidence. I am not who I was two years ago and am so much better for it.
sarien 6th-Jan-2012 05:29 am (UTC)
Thank god you can hide a post from specific people on facebook now. My boss is a friend and he's a rabid Ron Paul supporter. He is all about Occupy the Fed (b/c the current Occupy protesters have it wrong, free market = good, and the fed = bad). Once he had me edit a press release because it seemed too pro-government. I even heard him jokingly (in his words) talk about hiring a new writer who is pro-Ron Paul. He's the most common type of Ron Paul supporter who is all about destroying antidrug laws and much of the government, but can't put a logical argument together justifying these views beyond the superficial "individual rights", "fuck you, I got mine", "here, have some bootstraps" bullshit.

That man is vile and lives in la-la land -- I don't care what people say. Uggh, this man was also the congressman in the district I lived in when first moving to Texas. Between him and Rick Perry, it's a wonder I managed to still live in the state, 2 years later.
grace_om 6th-Jan-2012 05:45 am (UTC)
On the other hand, unless you enjoy salmonella in your food and lead in your paint, unless you think it’s OK that your doctor has no medical degree and your lawyer no license, unless you’re fine with breathing sooty air and drinking tainted water and unless you really think a black woman in Mississippi, locked out of public places by threat of violence and force of law, should have been required to wait on market forces to rescue her, you must regard Paul’s moral imbecility with a certain appalled awe.

So much this.
hii_fashion 6th-Jan-2012 08:52 am (UTC)
I love Leonard Pitts' articles.
homasse 6th-Jan-2012 12:07 pm (UTC)
LOL at all the Paulbots in the source comments. XD

And to share:

Is Ron Paul racist?
tabaqui 6th-Jan-2012 12:20 pm (UTC)
A brain that won't move beyond ideas formulated 30 years ago isn't brain i want running the country. If you can't absorb new stuff and learn and maybe even change to fit the changing times....you're kinda scary to me.
maladaptive 6th-Jan-2012 12:49 pm (UTC)
Leonard Pitts is the bright spot in the Herald, always.
vehemencet_t 6th-Jan-2012 01:12 pm (UTC)
Just a little thing.

On the other hand, unless you enjoy salmonella in your food and lead in your paint, unless you think it’s OK that your doctor has no medical degree and your lawyer no license, unless you’re fine with breathing sooty air and drinking tainted water and unless you really think a black woman in Mississippi, locked out of public places by threat of violence and force of law, should have been required to wait on market forces to rescue her

Right because obviously government is the only thing that can save us from those things. And they've *always* been so willing to do so too!

Forget about direct action and consensus participatory democracy and horizontal organization. No what we need is government to save us from the ills their own historical policies *helped* foster, enable and enforce. Ugh.
radiovolume 6th-Jan-2012 02:17 pm (UTC)
It's almost like you're advocating that people organize some kind of Civil Rights Movement to gain recognition from the government. Oh wait that happened and Ron Paul didn't like it.

It's so condescending and patronizing for you to continue to a) espouse that the government does no good ever and b) imply that no one understands that the people are the ones who must pressure the government to do the right thing. 80% of the things in that list you're mocking were enacted in response to movements created by the people, and the other 20% is just government doing the right thing.
tigerdreams 6th-Jan-2012 04:44 pm (UTC)
I have three words for you: The Gilded Age.
hauntermooneyes 6th-Jan-2012 09:27 pm (UTC)
Direct action and consensus participatory democracy are supposed to get us a government that will meet our needs and do what we want because it answers to us. The government is not evil; some of the people running it are. With the right people in place, it can "save us from those things."

So your argument that we can't have a helpful government and a politically-active populace doesn't make much sense.
angelofdeath275 6th-Jan-2012 01:26 pm (UTC)
A similar argument was made by segregationists in 1964 — and by slave owners in the 1850s.

How times have not changed.


..And there we go again using the word "racist" as a noun. /petpeeve
tiger0range 6th-Jan-2012 04:32 pm (UTC)
I am for supporting Ron Paul now. Not because I am a libertarian. I am not. There is no way he will be able to do the things he wants in office. But he will be able to get the country towards what he wants, and that's what I am interested in. Outside of longshots like Johnson and Roemer, he is the most unique candidate and the only one likely to change anything for the better.

I find the so called evidence that he is racist or anti civil rights or anti women laughable. You just have to look at his overall history to know he's not even close to that. Stubborn or not, it's also obvious when you listen to him speak that he is smarter and more canny than Obama.
shoujokakumei 6th-Jan-2012 04:42 pm (UTC)
Yeah, wanting to reverse Roe vs Wade isn't anti-woman or anything.
tigerdreams 6th-Jan-2012 04:50 pm (UTC)
Are you trying to say that he's not against the use of governmental power to prevent those with money and influence from exploiting, oppressing, and otherwise harming people in societally-disadvantaged groups, like racial minorities, women, and the poor? Are you trying to say it's not the case that, despite his stance that "individual freedom" should be protected from the ravages of the government, he's anti-choice?
angelofdeath275 6th-Jan-2012 06:37 pm (UTC)
But he will be able to get the country towards what he wants, and that's what I am interested in


so called evidence that he is racist or anti civil rights
baked_goldfish 6th-Jan-2012 07:15 pm (UTC)
I find the so called evidence that he is racist or anti civil rights or anti women laughable.

If you don't believe the words that have come out of his mouth, how about this?

HR 1096: The Sanctity of Life Act. He also introduced it in previous years. He's hell bent on this.

The Iranian Student Expulsion Act. Any immigrant from Iran should be ineligible for federal student aid.

He's also afraid of "anchor babies". Forget that the Constitution grants birthright citizenship, he'd like to do away with that.
sesmo 6th-Jan-2012 07:16 pm (UTC)
Ron Paul said that sexual harassment should be something resolved between the victim and the harasser, that civil rights laws impinge on the property rights of business owners, that he would support a Personhood Amendment to the Constitution guaranteeing all rights to a blastocyst, that the US is and should be a Christian nation with "tolerance" for others.

I'm very curious how you can disregard all that. I understand the people who don't care about any rights for anyone else can support him. But how can you?
makemerun 6th-Jan-2012 07:18 pm (UTC)
But what he wants is a libertarian white-wealthy-straight-male Objectivist shithole.

If you have never heard him say something racist or anti-woman, or otherwise horrible, then you are not listening.
lizzy_someone 6th-Jan-2012 10:17 pm (UTC)
I find the so called evidence that he is racist or anti civil rights or anti women laughable.

I know, right? People think he's anti civil rights just because he's against the Civil Rights Act! HA HA HA HA how stupid of them!
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