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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Touting Ken Cuccinelli, Ron Paul urges ‘nullification’ RICHMOND, Va. Headlining the final rally of Ken Cuccinellis underdog campaign for Virginia governor, Ron Paul suggested the nullification of Obamacare on Monday night. Jefferson obviously was a clear leader on the principle of nullification, the former Texas congressman said of the third president. Ive been working on the assumption that nullification is going to come. Its going to be a de facto nullification. Its ugly, but pretty soon things are going to get so bad that were just going to ignore the feds and live our own lives in our own states. Nullification is a loaded word, still brimming with connotations here in what was once the capital of the Confederacy. But it might not even have been the most provocative comment the 78-year-old made in a somewhat disjointed half-hour speech in the Richmond Convention Center. Cuccinelli is ending his bid where hes most comfortable: on the right. Twenty-two hours before the polls closed, and with only a slim chance of victory, the attorney general told several hundred supporters that Tuesdays vote is their chance to register displeasure with the Affordable Care Act. He said the problems with the HealthCare.gov web site are only a taste of whats to come, warning while not using the term death panel that the government will soon restrict access to care. This law is not done crushing liberty, he said. The next thing theyre going to do is tell those doctors how to treat you and then whether to treat you. Lets be very clear about whats at stake here. Cuccinelli said the U.S. Supreme Court has essentially given the government power to make people buy asparagus. He warned that liberals could even try to force people to buy cars manufactured by General Motors. I own an Equinox, he said, referring to the Chevy. You dont want to own an Equinox! A recurring attack of the last two weeks is that Democrat Terry McAuliffe lacks specific plans and speaks only in bromides. Cuccinelli likes to say that McAuliffe is the kind of guy who buys a puppy without having a plan on how hell take care of it. To hammer home this message, Cuccinelli had his wife, Teiro, bring their golden retriever, named Pony, onto the stage. Then came Paul. Free associating, he touched virtually every libertarian erogenous zone in his riff. He tore into the Constitutions 17th Amendment. Ratified in 1913, its the one that allows for the direct election of U.S. senators by popular vote. That undermined the principle importance of the states, said Paul. He criticized the 16th Amendment, which allowed the federal income tax. After the crowd chanted End the Fed, Paul decried the printing of more money by the Federal Reserve. We need someone to stand up to the authoritarians, he said. Theyre dictators. In the same breath, Paul criticized George W. Bush for growing government and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) for supporting National Security Agency intelligence collection. He stressed that the constitutional right to keep and bear arms was not for hunting, but to allow rebellion against tyrannical governments. The Second Amendment was not there so you could shoot rabbits, he said. Right now today, we have a great threat to our liberties internally. Cuccinelli brought Paul in to limit the bleeding of support to Libertarian candidate Robert Sarvis, who has pulled double digits in some polls and threatens to be a spoiler Tuesday. Paul, who won 40.5 percent in a two-way Virginia Republican primary against Mitt Romney last year, did not mention Sarvis by name, but he attacked him for floating a tax on the number of miles a car drives. Thats insane, said Paul. What kind of an invasion of privacy is that! Ken is quite correct on the tax issue: no new taxes. Paul said Cuccinelli has established a reputation for being unyielding, where you know hes not gonna back down. I dont know whether Ken calls himself a libertarian or not, he added, but I know hes a constitutionalist. Cuccinelli focused his closing speech on McAuliffe, but he highlighted his own pro-liberty initiatives including a successful push for an amendment to the state constitution to restrict eminent domain. Cuccinelli has typically spoken after his surrogates, including Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) at two stops earlier in the day. But he preceded Paul Monday night. Much of the crowd seemed like they had come for the libertarian icon. Paul said hes been doing very little traveling since leaving Congress at the end of last year, but he made an exception for Cuccinelli. Ken has been targeted because they want to humiliate those who would stand up for the Constitution, he said. Cuccinelli has spent the last few days presenting Tuesday as a referendum on Obamacare and whether to expand Medicaid. He went much further than he usually has attacking the law in his closing argument. Paul also talked extensively about the health law, which he believes unfairly forces some who dont need insurance to subsidize medical care for others. The taxes involved there, theyre evil, he said. Theyre going to create class warfare, generational warfare. After the rally, as Cuccinelli worked the rope line, he looked more relaxed than earlier, as if a huge weight had been removed from his shoulders. He lingered to smile for photos and thank supporters leaving the convention center around 10 p.m. McAuliffe has outspent Cuccinelli by millions of dollars, and the nasty ads have taken a toll on the Republicans public image. You hear about this war on women that the other side likes to talk about, but we have five daughters, said Cuccinelli. My greatest concern for them today is that opportunity is waning and not growing. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: X-15 (#0)
Didn't get out the white vote.
"If an angry bigot assumes this bountiful cause of Abolition, and comes to me with his last news from Barbados, why should I not say to him, 'Go love thy infant; love thy wood-chopper: be good-natured and modest; have that grace; and never varnish your hard, uncharitable ambition with this incredible tenderness for black folk a thousand miles off. Thy love afar is spite at home.'" |
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