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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Rand Paul and the Alternate History of World War II Jennifer Rubin, a Washington Post blogger/columnist who has never pretended to be a fan of Rand Paul, got her hands on a 2012 (vertical!) video of Rand Paul answering a question about sanctions on Iran. Paul mused a little about the mistakes America made before the outbreak of World War II. "There are times when sanctions have made it worse," Paul said. "Leading up to World War II, we cut off trade with Japan. That probably caused Japan to react angrily. We also had a blockade on Germany after World War I that probably encouraged some of their anger." Aaron Blake reached out to Paul's spokesman (and former chief of staff) Doug Stafford, who nipped the controversy at its stem: "The megalomaniac Hitler was to blame for the war and the Holocaust." But where did the nano-gaffe come from? The idea behind it, the idea that America supported lunkheaded blockades that angered the Nazi state needlessly, is pretty mainstream within the paleoconservative community. The Ludwig von Mises Institute, which employs old-time Ron Paul ally Lew Rockwell and frequent Ron Paul literary collaborator Tom Woods, has published several pieces advancing the argument. Here's Ralph Raico reviewing a book on the subject of the post-World War I hunger blockade. And here's David Gordon in a 2008 review of Nicholson Baker's Holocaust book.* After running through the World War I blockade story, he further impugns Churchill for the pre-World War II hunger blockade. At no point do any of these authors blame America for the crimes of Nazi Germany. And neither did Paul. All that's revealed in this incident is that Paul is conversant with the work of paleolibertarian histories. That's probably enough to terrify the people who'd prefer a hawk atop their 2016 ticket. *I originally called "Human Smoke" a novel, but it wasn't. I did read "House of Holes," for whatever that's worth. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 3.
#2. To: Deasy (#0)
What Rand thinks about the past matters not at all. A country of foreigners doesn't have a foreign policy.
I disagree, PV. In my travels I've come to the conclusion that one thing marks a wide-awake American: a strong belief that the US was never under threat during either of the world wars, and that isolationism would have been preferable; our current problems are all related to immigration that happened before and after the world wars out of "charity," and the loss of liberties we suffered due to the rise in the police state to tamp down resistance. This is an indication that Rand Paul doesn't believe the Holocaust was a reason to enter the war. This is at least a suggestion that he understands the damage done to American security and cultural integrity by adopting an "It's a small world after all" approach to foreign policy. This is a potentially very unpopular stance, showing his ability to lead.
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